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| Friesen, David | 1 |
| Gmelch, Walter H. | 1 |
| Jorde-Bloom, Paula | 1 |
| Logiudice, Angelo J. | 1 |
| Manera, Elizabeth S. | 1 |
| Peterson, Marvin W. | 1 |
| Swent, Boyd | 1 |
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| Wright, Robert E. | 1 |
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| Reports - Research | 6 |
| Journal Articles | 4 |
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Peer reviewedGmelch, Walter H.; Swent, Boyd – Journal of Educational Administration, 1984
An exploratory field study of 1,156 Oregon school administrators identified 12 sources of stress shared at all administrative levels. These stressors included complying with rules, attending meetings, completing reports on time, gaining public support, resolving parent-school conflicts, evaluating staff, making decisions affecting others, and five…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Responsibility, Administrators, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedWright, Robert E.; Manera, Elizabeth S. – Rural Educator, 1985
Twenty-five rural educators completed a 12-item Q-sort on stress factors. Resolving parent/school conflicts was the most stressful, followed by handling student discipline, and completing reports on time. The stressors varied somewhat from stressors listed by urban teachers, but only slightly. (BRR)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education, Q Methodology, Rural Schools
Peer reviewedPeterson, Marvin W.; White, Theodore H. – Research in Higher Education, 1992
Using a theoretical model of institutional culture, organizational climate, and faculty motivation, a study examined how faculty (n=1,123) and administrators (n=381) in 10 colleges differed in their perceptions, whether differences were affected by institution type, and to what extent faculty and administrators had different implicit models of…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, College Environment, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics
Jorde-Bloom, Paula – 1987
This paper provides an overview of the dimensions of organizational climate as they relate to early childhood work environments. It reports the results of a study involving 629 early childhood workers representing 65 nonprofit and for-profit, center-based programs. The focus of the inquiry was to determine in what ways the 94 administrators and…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Child Caregivers, Day Care Centers, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedFriesen, David; And Others – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1984
Responses to a 45-item questionnaire on job satisfaction administered to 410 principals in Alberta, Canada, found that contributing factors were responsibility and autonomy, principal-teacher work involvement, liaison at the district level, status recognition and task demands. Resource adequacy, salary and benefits, and rapport with students were…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Administrator Qualifications, Administrator Role
Logiudice, Angelo J. – 1991
This document reports on a study in which 96 administrators, 4 authorities, 5 experts, and 16 individuals were sampled to isolate and identify some typologies of belief that administrators may have toward gay people in the workplace and to see how those typologies are affected by sex, sexual preference, and worksetting. A detailed description of…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Attitude Measures, Beliefs


