Bringing Out the Best in Teachers: What Effective Principals Do

Front Cover
Corwin Press, 2008 M07 23 - 176 pages
The third edition of this bestseller offers first-person accounts from teachers who share the influential strategies of outstanding principals who empowered them.
 

Contents

CHAPTER 1 PRINCIPALS AND THEIR EFFECTIVENESS
1
CHAPTER 2 THE POWER OF PRAISE
10
CHAPTER 3 INFLUENCING BY EXPECTING
22
CHAPTER 4 INFLUENCING BY INVOLVING
37
CHAPTER 5 GRANTING PROFESSIONAL AUTONOMY
57
CHAPTER 6 LEADING BY STANDING BEHIND
67
SUGGESTING VERSUS DIRECTING
80
CHAPTER 8 POSITIVE USE OF FORMAL AUTHORITY
92
CHAPTER 9 MIRRORS TO THE POSSIBLE
103
CHAPTER 10 CONCLUSIONS CAVEATS AND CHALLENGES
117
RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES
130
REFERENCES
134
INDEX
147
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About the author (2008)

Joseph Blase is a professor of educational administration at the University of Georgia. Since receiving his Ph.D. in 1980 from Syracuse University, his research has focused on school reform, transformational leadership, the micropolitics of education, principal-teacher relationships, and the work lives of teachers. His work concentrating on school-level micropolitics received the 1988 Davis Memorial Award given by the University Council for Educational Administration, and his coauthored article published in the Journal of Educational Administration won the W. G. Walker 2000 Award for Excellence. In 1999 he was recognized as an elite scholar, one of the 50 Most Productive and Influential Scholars of Educational Administration in the world. Blase’s books include The Politics of Life in Schools: Power, Conflict, and Cooperation (winner of the 1994 Critic’s Choice Award sponsored by the American Education Studies Association), Bringing Out the Best in Teachers (1994, 2000, 2008); The Micropolitics of Educational Leadership (1995), Empowering Teachers (1994, 2000), Democratic Principals in Action (1995), The Fire Is Back (1997), Handbook of Instructional Leadership (1998, 2004), Breaking the Silence (2003), and Teachers Bringing Out the Best in Teachers (2006). His recent research (coauthored with Jo Blase and Du Fengning, 2008), a national study of principal mistreatment of teachers, appeared in The Journal of Educational Administration. Professor Blase has published over 120 academic articles, chapters, and books.

Peggy C. Kirby is a former professor of educational leadership and foundations, university research professor, and endowed professor for school improvement at the University of New Orleans, where she taught graduate courses in research and school leadership. She is a certified teacher and program evaluator in the state of Louisiana. Since receiving a PhD in educational administration in 1987, she has investigated school-level factors, particularly leadership and governance, that influence student and teacher outcomes. She co-founded the Jefferson Community School, Louisiana’s first charter school that serves middle school students at risk of failure due to chronic discipline problems. She co-authored, with Vincent Anfara, Jr., Voices from the Middle: Decrying What Is, Imploring What Could Be (1999). Her research publications have focused on alternative middle schools, shared leadership, ethics in educational administration, charter schools, and classroom processes related to effective schooling, and have appeared in journals such as the American Journal of Education, the Journal of Educational Administration, and the Middle School Journal. Kirby is now president of ed-cet, inc., an educational research, evaluation, and consulting firm based in New Orleans. Her clients include school districts in 12 states that received federal or state funds to improve instruction, leadership, and climate in their schools. She helped create the School Leadership Center of Greater New Orleans, which emphasizes cross-district collegiality, professionalism, and research-based school improvement. Through the center, she continues to assist school leaders in examining and implementing alternative forms of governance based on teacher empowerment.

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