chapter 13 leadership in schools w. k. hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

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Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

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Page 1: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Chapter 13

Leadership in Schools

Page 2: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Leadership Defined• Bennis (1989): like beauty, (or pornography), leadership is

hard to define, but you know it when you see it• Chemers (1997:1): “…a process of social influence in which

one person is able to enlist the aid and support of others in the accomplishment of a common task”

• Most definitions agree that leadership involves a social influence process; beyond that, scholars dispute the meaning of leadership.

• We define leadership broadly as a social process in which an individual or a group influences behavior toward a shared goal.

Page 3: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Life as a School Administrator• Structured observation studies reveal similar characteristics

of administrative jobs across countries and organizational settings:– School administrators work long hours at a physically exhausting

pace– School leaders rely on verbal media, and spend much time

walking through the building and talking to individuals and groups– Administration requires the ability to change gears and tasks

frequently– Span of concentration for school administrators is short—the job

is fragmented and discontinuity is prevalent• How does this leave room for leadership? Look to

theoretical approaches of leadership for answers.

Page 4: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Trait Approach to Leadership

• Trait approach to leadership: Key leadership traits are inherited.

• Aristotle thought individuals were born with the qualities that would make them good leaders

• Bass (1990) chronicles historical approaches to leadership qualities in the US. and underscores Stogdill’s major review of the leadership research.

• Stogdill’s meta-analysis casts dim view on pure trait research: impact of traits varies widely from situation to situation, so a person does not become a leader based on the possession of traits alone

Page 5: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Personality• There are some traits and skills associated with effective leadership, which

can be broken into three groups: Personality, Motivation, and Skills

Personality: relatively stable dispositions to behave in a particular way--four are of particular note:

– Self-confident leaders: more likely to set high goals and persist– Stress-tolerant leaders: make good decisions, stay calm, provide decisive

directions under stress– Emotionally mature leaders: have accurate awareness of strengths and

weaknesses, are oriented toward self-improvement– Leaders with integrity: behaviors are consistent with stated values—these

leaders are seen as honest, ethical, responsible, and trustworthy

Page 6: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Motivational Traits• Motivation: set of energetic forces from both within and beyond an

individual to initiate work-related behavior and determine its form, direction, intensity, and duration

• Four motivational traits are key for effective leaders:– Task and interpersonal needs: effective leaders have drive for the task and

concern for people– Power needs: effective leaders seek positions of authority and are comfortable

exercising influence over others– Achievement orientation: effective leaders have a desire to excel, a drive to

succeed, willingness to assume responsibility– High expectations for success: effective leaders believe they can do the job

and will receive valued outcomes for their efforts• Physical traits, such as energy and activity, allow individuals to show their

competence through active engagement

Page 7: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Skills

• Yukl (2002) and Northouse (2004) note three important categories of skills for effective leadership– Technical Skills: specialized knowledge about a specific

type of work, activity, procedure, or technique– Interpersonal Skills: understanding of feelings and

attitudes of others, knowing how to work with people in individual and cooperative work relationships

– Conceptual Skills: ability to conceptualize, think logically, reason analytically, deductively and inductively

• Effective leaders need all three sets of skills.

Page 8: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Situational Approach to Leadership• Response to trait approach: Researchers tried to identify setting

characteristics that influenced leader success• Possible situational determinants of leadership:

– Structural properties of organization—size, hierarchy, formalization, technology

– Role characteristics—type and difficulty of task, rules, content, performance expectations, power

– Subordinate characteristics—education, age, knowledge, experience, tolerance for ambiguity, responsibility, power

– Internal environment—climate, culture, openness, participation levels, group atmosphere, values, norms

– External environment—complexity, stability, uncertainty, resource dependency, institutionalization

It is clear that both the situation and traits are important in effective leadership; it is not one or the other. Both are needed.

Page 9: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Leader Behavior• Early conceptualizations of leadership relied on two

categories of leader behavior:– Emphasis on people, interpersonal relations, groups– Emphasis on production, task completion, and goals

• Ohio State leadership studies– LBDQ (leader behavior description questionnaire) studies at

OSU in 1940’s measure two dimensions of leader behavior• Initiating structure: delineates relationship between leader and

subordinates, establishes defined patterns of organization, procedures, channels of communication.

• Consideration: indicates friendship, trust, warmth, interest, and respect in the relationship between the leader and members of the work group

Page 10: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Major findings of OSU studies• Four major findings of LBDQ studies (Halpin, 1966)

– Initiating structure and consideration are fundamental dimensions of leader behavior

– Effective leaders exhibit frequent behaviors on both dimensions

– Superiors and subordinates attribute success to behaviors in opposite dimensions: superiors tend to credit initiating structure behaviors; subordinates tend to credit consideration behaviors

– Weak relationship between leaders’ expressed beliefs on how they should behave, and subordinates’ descriptions of how leaders do behave; Knowing how to behave and behaving that way are two different events.

Page 11: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Recent Perspectives on Leader Behavior• Same style of leader behavior is not optimal across all

situations: The appropriate style depends on the situation.• Yukl (2002) proposes three basic dimension to leadership:

– Task-oriented behaviors: clarifying roles, planning and organizing operations, monitoring organizational functions

– Relations-oriented behaviors: supporting, developing, recognizing, consulting, and managing conflict

– Change-oriented behaviors: scanning and interpreting external events, articulating an attractive vision, proposing innovative programs, appealing for change, creating a coalition to support and implement changes

• Leaders typically engage in all three types of behavior• The particular situation plays an important role in determining

best mix.

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Leadership Effectiveness

• Both objective and subjective dimensions are used to assess leadership effectiveness– Accomplishment of organizational goals ,e.g.

student achievement (objective)– Self-assessments(subjective)– Reputation (subjective)– Perceptual evaluations by significant reference

groups (subjective)– Overall job satisfaction of subordinates (subjective)

Page 13: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Contingency Models of Leadership

• Contingency theory postulates that effectiveness of the leader is contingent upon the appropriate match of the leadership traits and skills with the situation.

• Some examples of Contingency Models:– Instructional Leadership– Fielder’s Contingency Model of Leadership– Substitutes for Leadership– Distributed Leadership

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Instructional Leadership: Alig & Hoy

• The effectiveness of the principal’s instructional leadership is contingent upon a climate of academic emphasis.

• Instructional Leadership Model postulates that effective instructional leaders perform three functions:

• Define and communicate goals• Monitor and provide constructive feedback on teaching• Promote and emphasize professional development.

• However, such leadership will not lead to high student achievement (effectiveness) unless there is also a climate, which emphasizes academic success.

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Page 17: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

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Fiedler’s Contingency Theory• Fiedler (1967): First major theory to propose specific

contingency relationships

• Situational control: power and influence leaders have to implement plans, decisions, and strategies is the situational variable– Determined by three factors:

• Position power• Task structure• Leader-member relations

• Effectiveness: extent to which group accomplishes primary goal

• Leadership Style: Task-oriented or Relations-oriented

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Fiedler’s Three Propositions1. In high-control situations, task-oriented leaders are more effective than relationship-oriented leaders2. In moderate-control situations, relationship-oriented leaders are more effective than task-oriented leaders3. In low-control situations, task-oriented leaders are more effective than relationship-oriented leaders

• Model tested rigorously, with mixed, but mainly supportive results• Criticisms:

– LPC has been a moving target: first measured emotional reaction to difficult subordinates, then relationship orientation, then the leader’s motivational hierarchy

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Substitutes for Leadership Model• Kerr and Jermier (1977) question basic assumption that formal leadership

is necessary; their model is their alternative– Substitutes: situational elements that replace or reduce a leader’s

ability to influence attitudes, perceptions, or behaviors of followers– Neutralizers: situational factors that prevent leader from acting in a

particular way or that nullify effect of leader’s actions• Three categories of situational variables have these influences:

– Characteristics of subordinates: abilities, training, experience, and knowledge, professional orientation, and indifference toward rewards

– Task characteristics: structured routine tasks, intrinsically satisfying tasks, and feedback

– Organizational characteristics: formalization of roles and procedures, flexibility of rules and policies, work group cohesiveness, spatial distance between administrator and followers

Leadership behavior and effective performance is moderated by subordinate, task, and organizational characteristics.

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Distributed leadership• Distributed leadership models challenge the assumption that

one person has to be in charge to make change happen; in this model leadership is an organizational quality.

• Distributed leadership embraces leadership by teams and groups.

• Spillane et al (2001, 2003):Define leadership around the technical core-- “the identification, acquisition, allocation, coordination, and use of social, material, cultural resources necessary to establish the conditions for…teaching and learning”

The distribution and quality of leadership vary across a variety of situational factors; hence effective distributed leadership depends upon matching leadership teams with the appropriate situation.

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Transformational Leadership• Pioneers: Burns (1978), Bass (1985): Three main types of leadership• Laissez-Faire leadership: absence of transactions with followers. These

leaders avoid expressing views or taking action, avoid or delay decisions, ignore responsibility, provide little feedback. Most passive, least effective of three types.

• Transactional leadership: motivate followers by exchanging rewards for services. Leaders identify what followers want and try to provide it as reward for effort. Respond to followers’ immediate self-interest. Exchanges are economic: pursued on basis of cost-benefit.– Contingent reward leadership: leader behaviors focus on role and task

requirements; provide rewards contingent on performance.– Active management-by-exception: leaders maintain high levels of

vigilance to ensure standards are met; take corrective action quickly.– Passive management-by-exception: leaders fail to intervene until

problems are serious.

• Transformational leadership: leadership is expanded to go beyond simple exchanges and agreement.

Page 22: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Transformational Leadership

Transformational leadership posits four main dimensions (the 4 I’s):

• Idealized Influence• Inspirational motivation• Intellectual motivation• Individualized consideration

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Idealized Influence• Idealized influence: builds trust, respect in followers, thus

forming basis for acceptance of big changes.

• Leaders display conviction and high standards of conduct, share risks, consider needs of others first, and never use power for personal gain. Followers admire and trust leader and thus buy into mission, even if it requires radical changes in the organization.

• Attributed idealized influence: followers perceive leader as being charismatic, confident, powerful, and focused on higher-order ideals.

• Idealized influence as behavior: charismatic actions of leaders that focus on values, beliefs, and sense of mission

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Inspirational Motivation

• Inspirational motivation: changes expectations of group members: problems CAN be solved

• Develops appealing vision to guide development of organizational goals and operating procedures

• Leader behaviors provide meaning, challenge for followers– Project attractive and optimistic future– Emphasize ambitious goals– Create idealized visions for organizations– Clearly communicate that vision is obtainable– Results: team spirit, enthusiasm, optimism, goal commitment,

shared vision within the work group

Page 25: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Intellectual Stimulation

• Intellectual stimulation: encourage followers’ creativity—question old assumptions, traditions and beliefs, reframe problems– Encourage followers to design new procedures and

programs and solve problems– Encourage unlearning—eliminate fixation on “way we’ve

always done it”– Insist on constant open examination of procedures,

receptivity to change– Nothing is sacred: any procedure, policy, or operation

can be contested on the merits

Page 26: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Individualized Consideration

Individualized consideration: leaders pay particular attention to each individual’s needs for growth and achievement

– Leaders act as mentors—help followers and colleagues develop

potential and take responsibility for own development

– Create new learning opportunities in supportive climate

– Recognize and accept individual differences in needs and values

– Use two-way communication, and interact personally with others

Page 27: Chapter 13 Leadership in Schools W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Research findings• Research on transformational leadership clarifies three

generalizations:– Idealized influence and inspirational leadership most satisfying and effective (Avolio,

1999; Bass, 1990)– Transformational leaders receive higher ratings, are perceived to lead more effective

organizations, and have subordinates that exert greater effort than transactional leaders (Yukl, 1998; Bass, 1998)

– Transformational leadership in schools directly influences teacher perceptions of student goal achievement and student grades (Leithwood, 1994)

• Influences three psychological characteristics of staff: perception of school characteristics, commitment to change, and organizational learning

• Depends upon attending to all four “I’s”, with individualized consideration as a base

• Support for Leithwood’s claims from other studies: Silins (1992), Marks & Printy (2003)

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Servant LeadershipServant leadership is behavior that nurtures individual development in the organization through listening, empathy, stewardship, and an awareness to develop followers who think ethically and foster sound interpersonal relations with their colleagues. • The servant leader attends to individual growth, to realizing

the organization’s goals, and to the ethical and moral effects on the broader community

• Servant leadership inverts the power pyramid to show the relative placement of leaders: The leader supports the organization and the responsibility for action is dispersed across the organization.

• Servant leadership stands on “seven pillars:” personal character, people first, skilled communication, compassionate collaboration, foresight, systems thinking, and moral authority

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Evolutionary Leadership Theory (ELT)• The basic premise ELT is that leadership and followership emerged during the

course of human evolution. • Leadership and followership are psychological adaptations that have been sculpted

into our brain; they are instinctive and universal and have become the natural order of things. We are programmed to live in groups, to be led, and to be obedient most of the time.

• ELT also postulates the particular traits associated with initiative taking and intelligence are largely inherited and propel people to power positions.

• Leadership has three important functions: it binds groups; it helps the group learn new things; and it teaches others how to lead.

• We have evolved to follow authority and we have developed an innate “follow the majority rule;” in fact, the desire to conform overwhelms the desire to be correct.

• The instincts of reciprocity, fairness, and hierarchy are hard wired into our psyches.• ELT emphasizes followers as a vital component of leadership. Increasingly leaders

need to learn how to shift their pattern of leadership as they as they interact with followers up the ladder of commitment from subordinates to supporters to loyalists to apprentices to disciples.

• Leaders need to be a source of inspiration for disciples, a teacher for apprentices, a defender for loyalists, a figurehead for supporters, and a provider for subordinates.

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W. K. Hoy © 2003, 2008, 2011

Practical Imperatives• Know your leadership style and be flexible: There is no one best style.• Match your leadership style to the situation: Effectiveness depends on the

appropriate matching.• “Mission first, people always:” Task achievement and supportive social relations

are essential for success.• Strive to be broadly effective: Your reputation, subordinate satisfaction, and goal

achievement are all important aspects of effectiveness.• Be both an instructional and organizational leader: Effective instructional

leadership depends on a school climate of academic emphasis.• Delegate and distribute leadership widely: Expertise drives success.• Be inspirational, intellectual, idealistic, and tailor you leadership to your

subordinates: Transformative change requires it.• Lead by serving: Servant leadership creates moral authority.• Make informality a virtue: Formal structures often interfere with authentic action.• Be just: Favoritism and nepotism erode fairness.• Avoid the Dark Triad: Narcissism, Machiavellianism, and a Psychopathy.