1 / 12

Leading for Efficacy

Leading for Efficacy. What Matters Most in Achieving Outcomes? “ The belief one has to accomplish what one sets out to do” . Empirical Findings. Building Collective Efficacy.

hilde
Télécharger la présentation

Leading for Efficacy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Leading for Efficacy What Matters Most in Achieving Outcomes? “The belief one has to accomplish what one sets out to do”

  2. Empirical Findings

  3. Building Collective Efficacy • To Explore the Organizational Operations in Schools for their Support of Self-Efficacy in Teachers & Collective Efficacy among Staff • Teacher Efficacy: “teachers beliefs about their capability to impact students’ motivation and achievement” (Moran & Hoy, 2002 p.2) • 30% of the Variance in Learning (Hattie, 2003)

  4. Building Collective Efficacy • How does the organizational design and operations in schools influence the sense of efficacy among teachers? • Operational Definition of Teacher Empowerment • The enabling capacity of the organizational and operational qualities of a school to support the growth of teacher self-efficacy & collective efficacy. • Beliefs: Although self & collective efficacy have a relationship of reciprocal causation, it is possible to have substantial self-efficacy & inadequate collective efficacy. Philanthropic Leadership (or empowerment) is critical in fostering the climate/culture to support self & collective efficacy.

  5. Empowering Collective Efficacy • The perceived level of empowerment in teachers will contribute to, or detract from, their level of self-efficacy & the organization’s degree of collective efficacy. To Teach or Educate? To Manage or Lead?

  6. Building Collective Efficacy Teacher Efficacy • Social Learning Theory (Rotter, 1966) • Attribution Theory • Locus of Control Rand Studies • Internal vs. External Locus • GTE, PTE & TE • Findings: Student Achievement & Teacher Follow-Through of Implementation

  7. Building Collective Efficacy Teacher Efficacy • Social Cognitive Theory (Bandura, 1977; 1997) • Self-Efficacy Theory / Collective Efficacy • Outcome Expectations • Self-Efficacy Expectations • Difficulty of the Task Analysis • 4 Sources for Self-Efficacy Appraisal • Personal Mastery • Vicarious Experience • Social/Verbal Persuasion • Physiological & Affective Ques

  8. Building Collective Efficacy Teacher Empowerment • Structural Power in Organizations (Kanter, 1977) • Kanter’s Perspective • Rossenwasser Perspective • Covey Perspective • Bandura: “Empowerment is not something bestowed through edict…It is gained through the development of self-efficacy”(1997, p.476)

  9. Collective Efficacy Shared Decision Making PersonalMastery ProfessionalGrowth Vicarious Experience Perceived Organizational Empowerment Student Achievement Status Verbal Persuasion Impact Affective Cues Autonomy Perceived Self-Efficacy

  10. SDM Mastery Collective Efficacy PG * Vicarious Perceived Organizational Empowerment Status * Student Achievement Persuasion Impact * Perceived Self-Efficacy Autonomy * Affective SDM=Shared Decision Making PG=Professional Growth Empowerment/Efficacy Model

  11. Operational Support for Empowerment

  12. Operational Support for Collective Efficacy

More Related