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Torelli, Joseph A.; Gmelch, Walter H. – People and Education, 1993
Surveys 1,000 Washington principals and superintendents to ascertain the nature and extent of their occupational stress and burnout and the association with sex role orientation. Superintendents perceive less task-based and conflict-mediating stress than do principals, but report more externally caused stress. Task-based stress is the best…
Descriptors: Burnout, Elementary Secondary Education, Principals, Sex Differences
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Fennell, Hope-Arlene – Journal of Educational Administration, 1999
Explores four women elementary principals' experiences with power in their working lives. Themes emerging through in-depth interviews included empowerment and positive, negative, and traditional power. These are discussed through three lenses: dominance, facilitation ("power through"), and "power with." All interviewees…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Empowerment, Foreign Countries, Interviews
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Collard, John L. – Educational Management & Administration, 2001
Reports on a broad-scale leadership and gender study, based on research on 400 principals in Victoria, Australia, between 1996-99. Although findings confirm previous claims concerning significant differences in female and male leaders' perceptions and beliefs, they acknowledge the importance of organizational cultures, value systems, and same-sex…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Beliefs, Elementary Secondary Education, Females
Farkas, James – 1983
Numerous studies indicate that an individual's perception of internal or external control over life events ("perceived locus of control") is a personality variable that influences the perception of a situation as threatening or stress-inducing. Whether for reasons of personality or because of "situational powerlessness," the…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education
Winslow, Mary Bowes – 1977
Administrative isolation involves the absence of colleagues to share problems, seek advice, offer and receive feedback, and obtain valid information regarding one's professional effectiveness. This condition of administrative isolation is exacerbated for women in administrative roles who are further isolated by their minority status. This paper…
Descriptors: Administrator Evaluation, Administrator Role, Administrators, Educational Research