Signs of a Manager’s Leadership in a Quality Educational Institution: Cases of the City and District Centre of Lithuania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Definition of a Quality Leader in the Management of an Educational Institution
2.2. The Competences Necessary for a Managerial Leader and Their Expression
2.3. The Concept of a Quality Education Institution
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Data Analysis Strategy and Methods
- To carry out a theoretical analysis of scientific literature in the context of the manager-leader of an educational institution and work with the community;
- To describe the attributes of the concept of a quality educational institution and its leader;
- To reveal what makes an educational institution quality and what criteria could be used to define a quality educational institution.
3.2. The Context of the Schools Selected for the Study
3.3. Study Participants
4. Results
4.1. Developing the Personality Traits of a Manager-Leader in Practice
4.2. Personal Qualities of a Manager-Leader
4.3. Manager-Leader Matter Competence
4.4. Signs of a Quality Education Institution
4.5. Trust in the Leader
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Question | Relevance of the Question to the Research Problem | Signs |
---|---|---|---|
1.1 | Tell us about your experience as a managerial leader. What are the qualities of a managerial leader that you would identify as essential for a high quality educational institution? Please argue. | The question is addressed to the manager-leader. The question aims to uncover the experience of manager-leaders, to find out what qualities manager-leaders themselves identify as necessary for a quality educational institution. | The question explores the personality traits of a manager-leader (Duevel et al. 2015; Fullan 2019; Fullan et al. 2020; Kitson 2018; Sahlberg 2011; Søby 2015) |
1.2 | Tell us about your experience of dealing with your manager. What are the qualities of a managerial leader that you would identify as essential for a high performing educational institution? Please argue. | The question is for teachers and parents. The question aims to uncover the staff member’s experience of interacting with their manager-leader, to find out what qualities staff members identify as essential for a quality educational institution. | Teachers’ and parents’ experiences of interacting with a manager-leader when the manager-leader’s personality is revealed (Duevel et al. 2015; Fullan et al. 2020; Kitson 2018; Sahlberg 2011; Søby 2015; Fullan 2019) |
2 | What competences do you think a manager-leader in education should have? | The question is addressed to all participants in the study. The question seeks to find out the competences of a leader in an educational establishment. | Manager-leader competences (Abdallah and Forawi 2017; Matthews 2011; Phipps and Prieto 2011; Tichnor-Wagner 2019) |
3 | What are the characteristics of a quality education institution? What are the criteria for determining whether an educational establishment is performing well? What is the role of the manager in this case? | The question is for everyone. The question seeks to find out how different stakeholders define the concept of a quality education institution. | Signs of a quality education institution (Grille and Kauffeld 2015; Hallinger 2005; Hoch et al. 2010; Pearce and Manz 2005; Small and Rentsch 2010; Wang et al. 2014) |
4 | Do the community trust you? Please give reasons and examples. And do you trust the community? | The question is for the manager-leader. The question seeks to clarify the importance of the issue of trust and the value base of the educational institution. | Manager-leader values. Trust as a value foundation (Blandford 2016; Gleason 2017; OECD 2019; Prøitz 2018; Standish and Nygren 2018) |
Respondent No. | Gender | Position | Years of Work Experience | City |
---|---|---|---|---|
D1 | Male | Director of the school | 30 | Marijampole |
D2 | Female | Deputy Director of the school | 10 | Vilnius |
T1 | Female | Expert-teacher of primary school | 25 | Marijampole |
T2 | Female | Teacher of primary school | 22 | Marijampole |
T3 | Female | Expert-teacher of primary school | 30 | Vilnius |
T4 | Female | Teacher of primary school | 15 | Vilnius |
T5 | Female | Teacher of primary school | 10 | Vilnius |
M1 | Female | The pupil’s mother | - | Marijampole |
M2 | Female | The pupil’s mother | - | Marijampole |
M3 | Female | The pupil’s mother | - | Vilnius |
M4 | Female | The pupil’s mother | - | Vilnius |
Categories | Subcategories | |
---|---|---|
Vilnius | Marijampole | |
Manager-Leader Experience | Pedagogical experience (D1, D2, T1, T2, T3, T4) Management experience (D1, D2, T1, T2, T3, T4) | |
Manager-leader personal characteristics | Inspiring, mobilising, tolerant (D2, T3, T4, M4, D1, T1, T2, M1, M2) | |
Incentivising employees (D2, T3, T4) Responsible (D2, T3, T4, M3, M4) Empowerment to act (D2, T3, T4, T5) Innovative (D2, T3, T4) Creative (D2, T3, T4, T5) Reliable (T3, T4, M3, M4) Hardworking (T4, M3, M4) Cooperative (T3, T4, M3, M4) | Open (D1, T1, T2, M1) Diplomatic (T1, T2, M1, M2) Understanding (T1, T2, M1, M2) Listening to staff (D1, T1, T2) Fair (D1, T1, M1) Consultative (D1) |
Manager-Leader Personality Trait | Example of a Statement from an Interview |
---|---|
Responsible | …above all, to demand of yourself and others, to be an example to the team, to be responsible, reliable, hard-working and humane. T4 |
Diplomatic | …it’s safe with the director, and he tries to handle all situations diplomatically. T2 |
Incentivising employees | …. I just try to encourage and activate teachers to take part in different projects, not only to look at Lithuanian experiences, but also to look abroad D2. …is able to encourage, know and recognise teachers. T3 |
Creative | …the leader will encourage the teachers, if the leader is innovative and creative, if the leader is looking for project ideas, if the leader is looking for project ideas, if the leader is looking for people for himself or herself, if the leader is looking for working groups, then I think that’s what I see in a leader who’s not afraid of ideas, of innovations, and who’s not only encouraging himself or herself to come up with ideas and to encourage teachers to come together and to put them into practice. T3 |
Understanding | … especially during the quarantine of COVID-19, they tried to understand the staff, they just tried to reassure. T2 |
Listening to staff | …I have to know people very well, to be able to listen to them, to hear one of the most important things D1. Allowing employees to express themselves, listening to employees’ opinions is important… T2 |
Fair | Our Head of School is fair to everyone. M1 |
Categories | Subcategories | |
---|---|---|
Vilnius | Marijampole | |
Management adherence to the principles of organising activities | Applying shared leadership principles team building (D2, T3, T4, M3, M4) High managerial competences (T3, T4, M3, M4) | Employees follow the manager, trust his/her performance, and are consulted on objectives (D1, T1, T2, M2) |
Clarity of performance measurement indicators | Encouraging active engagement by agreeing objectives and means of achieving them (T3, T4, M3, M4) | Employees feel that they are important (positive evaluation management predominates) (D1, T1, T2, M1, M2) |
Categories | Subcategories | |
---|---|---|
Vilnius | Marijampole | |
Creating the right microclimate | Positive microclimate (D1, D2, T1, T2, T3, T4, M1, M2, M3, M4) Smooth communication (D1, T1, T2, T3, T4, M1, M2, M3, M4) Safe environment (D2, T3, T4, T5, M1, M2) | |
Making progress | Pupils’ achievements and learning progress (D1, D2, T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, M1, M2, M3, M4) Mastery, subject competences and continuous professional development of teachers (D2, T2, T4, M1, M2, M3, M4) Community, togetherness, focus, cooperation, feedback (D1, D2, T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, M3, M4) | |
Novelty, innovation (D2, T3, T4) Institutional culture (T3, T4) Exclusivity, uniqueness of the institution, personalisation, teachers’ individual, unique methodologies (T3, T4, T5, M3, M4) | Achieving higher goals (T1, T2) Showing leadership (T1, T2) Opportunities to participate in a range of extra-curricular activities (M1, M2) Individuality, uniqueness (M1, M2) | |
Performance evaluation system | Internal evaluation (D2, T3, T4) External evaluation results (D2, T4, T5) Compliance with national agreements (T3, T5) | Set of criteria (D1, M1, M2) Taking into account the region’s opportunities (M1, M2) |
External opinion | Good feedback from pupils’ parents (M3, M4) Integration of the child into society after leaving school (M3, M4) | Good feedback from social partners, students and parents (D1, M1, M2) |
Categories | Subcategories | |
---|---|---|
Vilnius | Marijampole | |
Community trust | A sense of trust (D1, D2) | |
Employee appreciation (D2) Constant communication and clarification of priorities builds trust (D2) | Showing listening, attention, compassion, understanding (D1) |
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Jakavonytė-Staškuvienė, D.; Strazdauskienė, V. Signs of a Manager’s Leadership in a Quality Educational Institution: Cases of the City and District Centre of Lithuania. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030138
Jakavonytė-Staškuvienė D, Strazdauskienė V. Signs of a Manager’s Leadership in a Quality Educational Institution: Cases of the City and District Centre of Lithuania. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(3):138. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030138
Chicago/Turabian StyleJakavonytė-Staškuvienė, Daiva, and Viktorija Strazdauskienė. 2023. "Signs of a Manager’s Leadership in a Quality Educational Institution: Cases of the City and District Centre of Lithuania" Social Sciences 12, no. 3: 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030138
APA StyleJakavonytė-Staškuvienė, D., & Strazdauskienė, V. (2023). Signs of a Manager’s Leadership in a Quality Educational Institution: Cases of the City and District Centre of Lithuania. Social Sciences, 12(3), 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030138