How School Achievements Interplay with School Culture and Principal Behaviors: A Comparative Study

Authors

  • Aleksandra Tłuściak-Deliowska The Maria Grzegorzewska University
  • Urszula Dernowska The Maria Grzegorzewska University
  • Steve Gruenert Indiana State University

Keywords:

academic achievement, school culture, school performance, principal behavior, middle schools comparison

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to explore school culture in radically different schools due to school achievement. The particular objectives of this study were to investigate: (1) the teachers’ perceptions of school culture (2) the teachers’ perceptions of principal behaviors, and additionally (3) to determine the relationship between principals’ behaviors and perception of school culture by teachers. This study employed a comparative-descriptive research design and took place in A - Middle School, representing a high-performing school, and B -Middle School, representing a low-performing school. These two middle schools were both located in capital city of Poland and were selected based on their position in Warsaw Middle Schools Ranking. The “School Culture Survey” (Gruenert & Valentine, 1998) was used to obtain data about school culture factors. To determine the teachers’ perceptions of principal’s behaviors, “The Organizational Climate Description Questionnaire - Middle Level” (OCDQ-ML, Hoy et al., 1996) was used. Statistical comparisons of collaborative school culture indicated that the compared schools differ significantly in four school culture dimensions. In school A there is a culture focused on individual achievements, the competition more than cooperation, unlike the situation in B-middle school, in which collaborative school culture is strong and visible. According to principal behaviors, significant differences between compared schools were also identified. Namely, more supportive principal behaviors were typical for school B (low school performing), while restrictive principal behaviors were more common in school A (high-performing). Results indicated that principal behaviors and collaborative school culture were associated with each other.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Brankovic, N., Rodić, V., & Kostovic S. (2012). Determination of Indicators of School Culture in Primary Schools. The New Educational Review, 3, 45-55.

Butucha, K.G. (2013). School Type and School Setting Differences in Teachers Perception of School Culture. International Journal of Education and Research, 1(12), 1-12.

Cunningham, W., & Gresso, D. (1993). Cultural leadership: The culture of excellence in education. Needham Heights: Allyn and Bacon.

Endeman, J. (1990). Leadership and Culture: Superintendents and Districts. Paper presented at the meeting of the American Educational Research Association in Boston.

Fullan, M., & Hargreaves, A. (1996). What’s worth fighting for in your school? Buckingham: Open University Press.

Gruenert, S. (2000). Shaping a new school culture. Contemporary Education, 2(71), 14-17.

Gruenert, S. (2005). Correlations of collaborative school cultures with student achievement. NASSP Bulletion, 89, 645, 43-55.

Gruenert, S., & Valentine, J. (1998). Development of a school culture survey. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Missouri.

Gruenert, S.W., & Whitaker, T. (2015). School culture rewired. How to define, assess and transform it. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD.

Gruenert, S.W., & Whitaker, T. (2017). School culture recharged. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD.

Gumuseli, A.I., & Eryilmaz, A. (2011). The Measurement of Collaborative School Culture (CSC) on Turkish Schools. New Horizons in Education, 59 (2), 13-26.

Harris, A., & Muijs, D. (2003). Teacher leadership and school improvement. Education Review, 16, 39-42.

Hopkins, D., Ainscow, M., & West, M. (1994). School improvement in an era of change. New York: Teachers College Press.

Hoy, W.K., Hofman, J., Sabo, D., & Bliss, J. (1996). The organizational climate of middle schools: the development and test of the OCDQ-RM. Journal of Educational Administration. 34, 1, 41- 59.

Hoy, W.K., Tarter, C.J., & Kottkamp, R.B. (1991). Open schools/Healthy schools: measuring organizational climate. London: Sage.

Hoy, W.K., & Tarter, C.J. (1997). The road to open and healthy schools: A handbook for change (Elementary ed). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Josanov-Vrgovic, I., & Pavlovic, N. (2014). Relationship between the school principal leadership style and teacher’s job satisfaction in Serbia. Montenegrin Journal of Economics, 10, 1, 43-57.

Kachur, D.S., Stout, J.A., & Edwards, C.L. (2013). Engaging Teachers in Classroom Walkthroughs. Alexandria: ASCD.

Kennedy, J. (1991). Adding value to raw scores. Managing Schools Today, 1(4), 13-14.

King, W. H. (1965). Differences in mathematical achievement related to types of secondary school and their geographical locations. Educational Research, 8 (1), 74-80.

MacNeil, A.J., Prater, D.L., & Busch, S. (2009). The Effects of School Culture and Climate on Student Achievement. International Journal of Leadership in Education, 12, 1, 73-84.

Maslowski, R. (2001). School culture and school performance. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Twente.

Moffitt, J.R. (2007). What Works: Principal Leadership Behaviors that Positively Impact Student Achievement in Elementary Schools. Electronic Theses & Dissertations, 264, http://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/etd/264

Morris, A. B. (2009). Contextualising Catholic School Performance in England. Oxford Review of Education, 35, 6, 725-741.

Moses, M. S., & Nanna, M. J. (2007). The Testing Culture and the Persistence of High Stakes Testing Reforms. Education and Culture, 23(1), 55-72.

Sashkin, M., & Sashkin, M. G. (1990). Leadership and culture building in schools: Quantitative and qualitative understanding. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association in Boston.

Schein, E. H. (1985). Organizational Culture and Leadership. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Sergiovanni, T. (1994). Building community in schools. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Stolp, S., & Smith, S. C. (1995). Transforming school culture: Stories, symbols, values & the leader’s role. Eugene: ERIC.

Tłuściak-Deliowska, A., & Dernowska, U. (2015). Principal’s behaviors and job satisfaction among middle school teachers. The New Educational Review, 39, 1, 215-225.

Toutkoushian, R. K., & Curtis, T. (2005). Effects of Socioeconomic Factors on Public High School Outcomes and Rankings. The Journal of Educational Research, 98, 5, 259- 271.

Valentine, J. (2006). A collaborative culture for school improvement: Significance, definition, and measurement. http://education.missouri.edu/orgs/mllc/Upload%20Area- Docs/MLLC%20Culture%20Research%20Summary.pdf

Wang, F., & Zepeda, S.J. (2013). A comparative study of two schools: how school cultures interplay the development of teacher leadership in Mainland China. Creative Education, 4, 9, 63-68.

Wilby, P. (1988). The myth exploded: schools really do matter. The Independent, 24 March.

Wolk, R. A. (2011). Wasting Minds. Alexandria: ASCD.

Zepeda, S. J. (2013). The principal as instructional leader: A practical handbook (3rd ed.). Larchmont, NY: Eye On Education.

Zhu, C., Devos G., & Li Y. (2011). Teacher Perceptions of School Culture and Their Organizational Commitment and Well-Being in a Chinese School. Asia Pacific Education Review, 12, 2, 319-328.

Additional Files

Published

2017-04-01

How to Cite

Tłuściak-Deliowska, A. ., Dernowska , U., & Gruenert, S. (2017). How School Achievements Interplay with School Culture and Principal Behaviors: A Comparative Study. Psycho-Educational Research Reviews, 6(1), 10–22. Retrieved from https://perrjournal.com/index.php/perrjournal/article/view/282

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.