The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers

This study aimed at examining the leadership and supervisory practices of secondary school principals in the State of Amhara in view of teachers. It investigated the leadership factors that attributed for poor education quality. To that effect, the leadership and supervisory practices of principals...

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Main Authors: Melaku Mengistu Gebremeskel, Demeke Wolie Ambaye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of education, Bahir Dar University 2023-01-01
Series:Bahir Dar Journal of Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239957
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author Melaku Mengistu Gebremeskel
Demeke Wolie Ambaye
author_facet Melaku Mengistu Gebremeskel
Demeke Wolie Ambaye
author_sort Melaku Mengistu Gebremeskel
collection DOAJ
description This study aimed at examining the leadership and supervisory practices of secondary school principals in the State of Amhara in view of teachers. It investigated the leadership factors that attributed for poor education quality. To that effect, the leadership and supervisory practices of principals were examined. The study employed the descriptive survey research design of the quantitative approach involving 1115 teachers recruited through a proportionate stratified random sampling technique. Data collected through a questionnaire and analyzed using descriptive statistics and multivariate analyses of variance revealed that teachers perceived the leadership and supervisory practices of principals were weak. Teachers have very weak differences in terms of three demographic factors, except sex which has no difference at all, regarding their poor leadership practices. Regarding supervisory practices, qualification level demonstrated a weak difference, the rest three with no significant differences. In addition, teachers’ acknowledgment of the supervisory role of their principals is inversely correlated to the qualification level former, despite the weak difference. That is, the higher teachers’ qualification level the less they acknowledge the supervisory role of their principals. The findings also revealed that leadership and supervisory practices of principals are correlated positively and significantly. Such a perception may have far-reaching consequences on the commitment and effectiveness of teachers and the quality of education. Therefore, the assignment of principals needs to be based on competence to foster commitment and ownership among all parties. In addition, further research that triangulates data from students, principals, and other stakeholders through different methods shall be conducted to resolve leadership-related limitations in secondary schools.
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spelling doaj-art-7f4e7992f755491e928a3c51fe3d90ce2025-02-08T19:50:58ZengCollege of education, Bahir Dar UniversityBahir Dar Journal of Education1816-336X2415-04522023-01-01222The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachersMelaku Mengistu GebremeskelDemeke Wolie Ambaye This study aimed at examining the leadership and supervisory practices of secondary school principals in the State of Amhara in view of teachers. It investigated the leadership factors that attributed for poor education quality. To that effect, the leadership and supervisory practices of principals were examined. The study employed the descriptive survey research design of the quantitative approach involving 1115 teachers recruited through a proportionate stratified random sampling technique. Data collected through a questionnaire and analyzed using descriptive statistics and multivariate analyses of variance revealed that teachers perceived the leadership and supervisory practices of principals were weak. Teachers have very weak differences in terms of three demographic factors, except sex which has no difference at all, regarding their poor leadership practices. Regarding supervisory practices, qualification level demonstrated a weak difference, the rest three with no significant differences. In addition, teachers’ acknowledgment of the supervisory role of their principals is inversely correlated to the qualification level former, despite the weak difference. That is, the higher teachers’ qualification level the less they acknowledge the supervisory role of their principals. The findings also revealed that leadership and supervisory practices of principals are correlated positively and significantly. Such a perception may have far-reaching consequences on the commitment and effectiveness of teachers and the quality of education. Therefore, the assignment of principals needs to be based on competence to foster commitment and ownership among all parties. In addition, further research that triangulates data from students, principals, and other stakeholders through different methods shall be conducted to resolve leadership-related limitations in secondary schools. https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239957Leadership; supervision; principals; instructional leadership; national standards
spellingShingle Melaku Mengistu Gebremeskel
Demeke Wolie Ambaye
The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
Bahir Dar Journal of Education
Leadership; supervision; principals; instructional leadership; national standards
title The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
title_full The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
title_fullStr The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
title_full_unstemmed The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
title_short The leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the State of Amhara, Ethiopia, as perceived by teachers
title_sort leadership and supervisory practices of principals in public secondary schools of the state of amhara ethiopia as perceived by teachers
topic Leadership; supervision; principals; instructional leadership; national standards
url https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239957
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