Preparing Instructional Leaders: Evaluating a Regional Program to Gauge Perceived Effectiveness

Authors

  • Gregory Rodney MacKinnon Acadia University
  • David Young St. Francis Xavier University
  • Sophie Paish Research Assistant MindBloom Consulting
  • Sue LeBel Program Coordinator Nova Scotia Instructional Leadership Academy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v14n1a866

Keywords:

Keywords Instructional leadership, Program review, Professional development

Abstract

An instructional leadership program (ILP) has offered education and support to three cohorts of educational leaders in Nova Scotia, Canada, amounting to approximately 130 participants. Quantitative and qualitative feedback from a convenience sample (n = 90) suggests that the ILP offers an extremely useful practical program; in fact, 95 percent of the sample indicates advances in the categories of professional growth, improved instructional leadership, and tangible progress in administrative effectiveness. Systemic and school environment trends have dictated that educational leaders need a skill set that positions them to respond more aptly to issues of poverty, socioemotional health, and mental health while attending to improved community building both within the school and in the greater public. This study uses surveys, interviews, and focus groups to identify emerging and impending challenges.

Author Biographies

Gregory Rodney MacKinnon, Acadia University

Professor

School of Education

David Young, St. Francis Xavier University

Associate Professor

Faculty of Education

Downloads

Published

2019-02-04

How to Cite

MacKinnon, G. R., Young, D., Paish, S., & LeBel, S. (2019). Preparing Instructional Leaders: Evaluating a Regional Program to Gauge Perceived Effectiveness. International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v14n1a866

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