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Jones, Alisha; Pijanowski, John C. – NASSP Bulletin, 2023
Diminished self-care practices and heightened stress of school counselors are continuing problems in education. With role ambiguity, high student-to-counselor ratios, emotional exhaustion, and other factors adding pressure to the roles and responsibilities of school counselors, this study investigated the well-being practiced of Missouri school…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Well Being, Work Environment, Stress Variables
Klocko, Barbara Ann; Wells, Caryn M. – NASSP Bulletin, 2015
This study is designed to understand how principals perceive the common stressors associated with leading an educational enterprise and propose strategies for relief from job-related stressors. As such, the same survey results from principals in 2009 and 2012 are analyzed. The results indicated increases in the perceived state of stress with…
Descriptors: Principals, Stress Variables, Work Environment, Administrator Surveys
Peer reviewedCalabrese, Raymond L. – NASSP Bulletin, 1991
Assistant principals are a neglected variable in the effective schools equation. The traditional conceptualization of assistant principals as disciplinarians still prevails, despite these administrators' usefulness as change agents, motivators, ethical models, community relations agent, care givers, and innovators. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Administrator Role, Leadership Responsibility, Principals
Peer reviewedKarpicke, Herbert; Murphy, Mary E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
A positive climate is characterized by a comfortable, orderly, and safe environment. A healthy culture exists when all stakeholders understand an organization's goals and purposes and work productively to achieve them. This article contrasts the "McSchool" (efficiency-celebrating) cultural model with the spaceship-discovery model,…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational Environment, Leadership Responsibility, Models
Peer reviewedMurphy, Joseph – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
Principals in restructuring schools are working in an increasingly turbulent policy environment that adds expectations but deletes little from their traditional roles. Two tasks form the basis of newly defined power relationships--delegating responsibilities and developing collaborative decision-making processes. Leading from the center means…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Elementary Secondary Education, Expectation, Leadership Responsibility
Peer reviewedPortin, Bradley S.; Shen, Jianping; Williams, Richard C. – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
Legislators, school boards, and district administrators proposing more changes affecting schools and the principal's role should realize that many principals have little capacity to assume additional duties. Time constraints and external priorities are converting principals from instructional leaders to managers, while increasing their role's…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational Change, Effective Schools Research, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedGmelch, Walter H.; Swent, Boyd – NASSP Bulletin, 1981
Describes the most frequent stress producers identified by school administrators. Suggests four areas that warrant further training and improvement--time management, interpersonal relations, community relations, and coping with rules and regulations. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, Administrators, Conflict
Peer reviewedKaplan, Leslie S.; Owings, William A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Neglected in educational literature, assistant principals can nonetheless help principals by acting as vision codesigners, teacher coaches and evaluators, master schedule designers, program developers, instructional managers, and communicators. Shared instructional leadership allows for greater job control, flexibility, initiative, collegial…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Assistant Principals, Collegiality, Instructional Leadership
Peer reviewedLehr, Arthur E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
A case study explored availability of collaboration benefits and the difficulties teachers experienced in attaining them in a traditional comprehensive high school that hosts a career academy and a school-within-a-school. Administrators should encourage teachers' voluntary participation, allow adequate planning time, provide training, and increase…
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Administrator Role, Case Studies, High Schools
Peer reviewedLouis, Karen Seashore; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
A study of two new middle schools demonstrates that reform is difficult to achieve unless teachers are expert in their work, share their expertise, and seek and create new knowledge to support their work. Leading from the center, school leaders figure significantly in expanding learning and developing community even in "teacher-run"…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Collegiality, Educational Change, Futures (of Society)
Peer reviewedHausman, Charles S.; Crow, Gary M.; Sperry, David J. – NASSP Bulletin, 2000
The "ideal" principal is facing a world of decentralized school structures, increasing and changing environmental boundaries and roles, less homogeneous schools, closer contact with stakeholders, and a market-driven view of education. Principals should view themselves as environmental negotiators, not merely school-system managers.…
Descriptors: Accountability, Administrator Role, Context Effect, Decentralization

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