Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the effectiveness of a teacher leadership academy (TLA) organized through a school district/university partnership in a small, US Suburban School District in increasing teachers’ participation in leadership activities. Design/methodology/approach - T...

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Main Author: Jeremy D. Visone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JRIT-08-2018-0019
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spelling doaj-bc0bfd05ab5740ff89e775864faaf0b32020-11-24T21:52:56ZengEmerald PublishingJournal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning2397-76042018-11-0111219220610.1108/JRIT-08-2018-0019618772Empowerment through a teacher leadership academyJeremy D. Visone0Educational Leadership, Policy, and Instructional Technology, Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, Connecticut, USAPurpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the effectiveness of a teacher leadership academy (TLA) organized through a school district/university partnership in a small, US Suburban School District in increasing teachers’ participation in leadership activities. Design/methodology/approach - TLA participants (n=11) were surveyed using the Teacher Leadership Activities Scale, and their results were compared to a control group of teachers in the district who were not participating in the TLA (n=12). Interviews and open-ended response items provided qualitative data to examine how the TLA contributed to teachers’ growth as leaders. Findings - Results indicated that teachers in the TLA did increase participation in teacher leadership activities. Qualitative data revealed themes of many espoused benefits from TLA participation, including increased interactions with administrators, improved understanding of the obstacles associated with implementing changes, and expanded leadership capacity. Research limitations/implications - Conditions that both enhanced and detracted from teacher leaders’ growth were identified and outlined, including formal leaders’ participation in TLA activities, material support for projects, and a supportive atmosphere (enhancers) and administrative roadblocks and the inability to remediate capacity issues for teacher leaders (detractors). Originality/value - The conditions outlined above will assist those interested in creating TLAs in doing so with purpose and increased chance for buy in and success.https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JRIT-08-2018-0019Distributed leadershipTeacher leadershipEmpowerment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeremy D. Visone
spellingShingle Jeremy D. Visone
Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
Journal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning
Distributed leadership
Teacher leadership
Empowerment
author_facet Jeremy D. Visone
author_sort Jeremy D. Visone
title Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
title_short Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
title_full Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
title_fullStr Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
title_full_unstemmed Empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
title_sort empowerment through a teacher leadership academy
publisher Emerald Publishing
series Journal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning
issn 2397-7604
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the effectiveness of a teacher leadership academy (TLA) organized through a school district/university partnership in a small, US Suburban School District in increasing teachers’ participation in leadership activities. Design/methodology/approach - TLA participants (n=11) were surveyed using the Teacher Leadership Activities Scale, and their results were compared to a control group of teachers in the district who were not participating in the TLA (n=12). Interviews and open-ended response items provided qualitative data to examine how the TLA contributed to teachers’ growth as leaders. Findings - Results indicated that teachers in the TLA did increase participation in teacher leadership activities. Qualitative data revealed themes of many espoused benefits from TLA participation, including increased interactions with administrators, improved understanding of the obstacles associated with implementing changes, and expanded leadership capacity. Research limitations/implications - Conditions that both enhanced and detracted from teacher leaders’ growth were identified and outlined, including formal leaders’ participation in TLA activities, material support for projects, and a supportive atmosphere (enhancers) and administrative roadblocks and the inability to remediate capacity issues for teacher leaders (detractors). Originality/value - The conditions outlined above will assist those interested in creating TLAs in doing so with purpose and increased chance for buy in and success.
topic Distributed leadership
Teacher leadership
Empowerment
url https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JRIT-08-2018-0019
work_keys_str_mv AT jeremydvisone empowermentthroughateacherleadershipacademy
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