REICE 2014 - Volume 12, No 4, special issue
Collaborative leadership and school improvement:
Understanding the impact on school capacity and student learning
Abstract

Fifty years of theory and research offer increasing levels of support for the assertion that principal leadership makes a difference in the quality of schooling, school development, and student learning. In the current context of global education reform, however, recent inquiries have focused on identifying how teams of school leaders contribute to school improvement and student learning. This paper reports findings drawn from a series of empirical analyses that assessed the effects of collaborative leadership on school improvement capacity and student learning in a large sample of US primary schools over a four-year period. Our findings support the prevailing view that collaborative school leadership can positively impact student learning in reading and math through building the school's capacity for academic improvement. The research extends this finding, however, by offering empirical support for a more refilled conception that casts leadership for student learning as a process of mutual influence in which school capacity both shapes and is shaped by the school's collective leadership.

Key words
Leadership, Change, School improvement, Leadership effects, Leadership for learning.
Full text
Spanish translation HTMHTML
Spanish translationPDFPDF
Reference

Hallinger, P.. & Heck, R.H. (2014). Liderazgo colaborativo y mejora escolar: Comprendiendo el impacto sobre la capacidad de la escuela y el aprendizaje de los estudiantes. REICE. Revista Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación, 12(4e), 71-88.
Retrieved from: http://www.rinace.net/reice/numeros/arts/vol12num4e/art3.pdf

Original version
This article has been originally published by School Leadership & Management: Formerly School Organisation, 2013, vol 30, n 2.

Translated by Nina Hidalgo Farran.