1995 Crow, Glascock
1995 Crow, Glascock
1995 Crow, Glascock
Research context
The following review of literature is organized in terms of four questions: Why
is the principal’s role conception important? What are the sources of role
conceptions? What are the components of a role conception? What is the
process of socialization to a new role conception?
Before examining literature that emphasizes its importance, we will define
role conception from two perspectives: societal and individual. The societal
perspective defines role conception as an image of a profession as seen by the
community at large or the occupational community in which the profession
exists[4,5]. This image consists of “shared beliefs about the meaning and
mission of occupational group membership in relation to society’’[6].
The second approach to defining role conception is from the individual’s
perspective. Becker and Carper[7], Davis[8], and Hughes[9] identify the
Journal of Educational
Administration, Vol. 33 No. 1, 1995,
pp. 22-43. © MCB University Press, A version of this article was presented at the annual conference of the University Council for
0957-8234 Educational Administration, Minneapolis, MN, USA, 31 October 1992.
existence of a role conception as a requirement for identifying with a new role. A new
Davis holds that the process takes place when one exchanges a “layman’s view” conception of the
of the role for a professional view[8, p. 237]. “To function effectively in a new principalship
role, a person must develop a way of viewing himself or herself in that role – a
subidentity”[10].
Socialization mechanisms
Various researchers[10,37,38] have identified three mechanisms in the process
of socialization to a new role: exploration, giving up the previous role, and
adjusting self and new role to each other. Exploration is the seizure of the idea
of the new role as a possibility for one’s self. It may consist merely of a decision
to seek the role or involve many steps of investigation, research and the
gathering of others’ opinions[10].
Giving up the old role, for example a teacher moving to administrator, may
prove to be the most difficult since habits have been established in the old role.
Hall[10] argues that a modification of self-esteem may take place, for example,
moving from a mastery level to a position of novice. Crow et al.[39] found the
shift from master to novice to be a problem for individuals moving from
business to teaching.
Van Mannen and Schein[1] identify this process of leaving an old role as
emphasizing either divesting of the old role or investing in a new role.
Greenfield[2] found that socialization to the principalship typically emphasizes
divestiture, that is, leaving teaching, which may discourage the individual from
retaining particular norms of teaching, for example, a focus on classroom
process and outcomes.
Individuals, who move to a new role, make adjustments in the new role
conception so that they feel comfortable. New relationships are established in
terms of individual needs and perceptions of the new role. Each person
responds to a given situation in a personal manner characteristic of her/himself.
Hart[40], in a more recent discussion of socialization, distinguishes
professional and organizational socialization. Professional socialization deals
with the skills, knowledge and dispositions required to be part of the
profession[41,42]. Organizational socialization comes to the forefront when an
individual assumes a position in a specific organization[43]. These two areas of
Journal of socialization may conflict if the specified organization does not hold the same
Educational values as the professional training environment.
Administration Jones[44] offers a taxonomy which identifies three areas of socialization of the
administrator: context, content, and sociality. Context refers to the situation in
33,1 which the beginning principal must operate; this includes teachers, students,
other administrators and superiors. Content refers to the knowledge to be
26 gained, the manner of presentation and perhaps the limited time given to learn
the material.
Sociality refers to the “use of social forces to influence outcomes’’[44, p. 456].
This sociality may be serial or disjunctive depending on the presence or absence
of a previous role model. Serial sociality exists if there is a strong, previous role
model for the new administrator, while disjunctive sociality exists if no role
model is present. The absence of a role model allows the new administrator to
be innovative and less likely to adhere to old ways and styles of doing business,
while a previous role model may give direction and confidence to the new
administrator. On the negative side, the absence of a role model may cause
initial floundering or lack of confidence, while presence of a role model may
create a more conservative, custodial view of the role[30].
Methodology
The sample for this study consists of the first cohort of candidates in a non-
traditional principal preparation programme at an urban university in eastern
USA. The programme was designed to recruit women and minorities into the
principalship and to prepare these individuals for site-based managed schools.
The university and the city board of education collaborated in the recruitment,
training and placement of candidates. The cohort consisted of 17 individuals (four
men and 13 women) who entered the programme in the autumn of 1989 and
completed it in the winter of 1991.
Data for the study were collected in two ways. First, candidates received and
completed questionnaires on entry to the programme. These questionnaires asked
for career history, circumstances relating to the decision to teach and to enter
administration and a variety of questions concerning their views regarding site-
based management, decision making, and other features of role conception (see
Appendix). Second, candidates were interviewed when they completed the
programme. This semistructured interview focused on their perspectives on the
preparation programme and the principalship: what stood out for them about the
training; what they most looked forward to about the principalship; what they
most dreaded; and their criteria for evaluating themselves as professionals.
Responses to these questions were used to identify sources of role conception,
definitions of role conceptions, and the process of socialization to a role conception.
Questionnaires were received from 16 of the 17 individuals in the first cohort.
The analysis used in this presentation is based on both quantitative and
qualitative methodologies. The quantitative analysis makes use of descriptive
statistics to understand entry level perspectives on the role of the principal. Owing
to the small sample, no attempt is made to draw statistical inferences to larger
populations. The qualitative analysis is based on case reviews of all 16 exit A new
interviews. Patterns and themes were identified from content analysis and conception of the
organized in terms of sources of role conception, definition of role conception, and principalship
mechanisms of socialization to a role conception. These two kinds of analysis
permit us to describe the perspectives of candidates at entry and to understand
how their conception of the role changed during the course of the programme. The
analysis also allows us to identify alternative explanations for the role change. 27
Selection of candidates
Candidates were recruited and selected in such a way as to find the most able
but possibly overlooked teachers, especially among women and minorities. The
following elements constituted the recruitment and selection process:
(1) Nomination by superintendents with emphasis on identifying excellent
teachers among women and minorities.
(2) Rigorous application process requiring nominees to reflect on career
history, experiences as a teacher/learner, and vision of leadership.
(3) Reference letters from superintendent, principal, and peer along with
documentation of work with adults and children.
(4) First cut selection made by advisory committee consisting of (college)
faculty and board of education staff members.
(5) Videotaped sessions with semifinalists in small groups to assess abilities
to communicate, work co-operatively, influence group opinion and
facilitate group task completion.
(6) Final selection by a panel of recognized experts unaffiliated with the
college who viewed videotapes and read applications[45].
These elements, along with a cohort approach to the preparation, reinforced the
uniqueness of the programme and the selected candidates. At the initial
meeting of the first cohort, the president of the college spoke of the programme
as “the West Point of educational leadership training”. Individuals selected for
the programme knew they were the first cohort in a programme which faculty
and sponsors considered different from traditional administrator training
programmes.
Programme content
The primary aim of the programme was to develop leaders for schools of
tomorrow, characterized by site-based management and shared decision
Journal of making. Although the programme provided experiences as well as content
Educational about the administration of schools as they are typically found today, faculty
Administration were especially concerned that candidates develop the vision and skills to lead
a different type of school, especially one in which student empowerment
33,1 through learning, teacher empowerment and site-based management were
central. Following the custodial versus innovative role distinction[1], the
28 programme designers emphasized experiences which encouraged students to
question traditional caretaker roles of the principal and consider new
definitions of the mission and strategies of the role.
The content of the programme consisted of three major components:
theoretical, experiential and analytical. The primary features of each
component are:
(1) Theoretical component:
● use of conceptual approaches from social sciences, literature and art
to provide multiple perspectives on educational processes;
● foundations course on adult development, curriculum development,
organizational diagnosis and leadership; and
● skill courses, such as supervision, finance, and planning.
(2) Experiential component:
● paid, semester-long, full-time internship with mentor;
● college faculty adviser to plan internship, lead cohort advisement
conferences, and help candidates reflect on experiences;
● on-site visits to exemplary programmes; and
● two laboratories: communication and leadership.
(3) Analytical component:
● introduction to research methodologies to diagnose schools and
implement change strategies; and
● action research project on a school innovation.
Programme process
Candidates progressed through the programme in a cohort, which reinforced a
“shared ordeal’’[46] quality to the programme. Course assignments, outdoor
leadership experiences, and advisement conferences emphasized group
cohesiveness and co-operation. The released time internship with a mentor and
frequent conferences with college faculty encouraged the development of an
innovative role orientation. Throughout the programme, candidates were
reminded that both the college and the board of education viewed them as a
select cadre of potential leaders.
At the inception of the programme, a decision was made to emphasize
collaboration between the college and board of education by appointing
codirectors, one from each institution. The board of education codirector was
not appointed until after the first cohort began. Soon thereafter, the college A new
codirector acquired other responsibilities which reduced the time she had conception of the
available to the programme. Some candidates felt that the increased role of the principalship
board of education codirector, together with the gradual separation from the
programme of the first group of college faculty, led to a bureaucratization of the
programme and a less nurturing atmosphere.
At the end of the programme, candidates expected to be placed in schools, 29
either as assistant principals or principals. Just before the programme ended,
however, a severe budget crisis resulted in cutbacks for the school system and
difficulty in placing all the candidates. One year after the end of the programme,
nine of the 17 individuals had received some type of administrative
appointment, either at the school or district level. Three of these were acting or
interim principals/directors of schools and three were acting assistant
principals.
Other individuals described the college faculty as giving them a sense of “super-
power” convincing them they were special and could effect change.
Candidates also identified the internship as a source of role conception. What
the college provided in terms of vision for future schools, the internship
provided in terms of “what’s out there and what goes on” in schools. The earlier
potency that candidates ascribed to the faculty and programme gave way to the
impact of the school system and the internship. This tension among these
Journal of sources suggests the dilemma between a conception focusing on the future and
Educational a conception based on the reality of today.
Administration Probably the strongest response regarding sources of role conception focused
on the cohort. According to the candidates, the cohort gave them a sense of
33,1 identity. As one individual said, the cohort helped him in terms of “where I saw
myself, and where I’d like to be”. By exchanging ideas, the cohort also provided
32 a set of shared beliefs; it helped them coalesce into similar visions of the role.
The board of education was also a source of role conception. As has been
previously mentioned, candidates saw the board, in contrast with the
programme and faculty, as emphasizing bureaucracy. But some individuals
seemed to see this as a necessary balance, “because it is a bureaucracy”.
Finally, candidates identified themselves as a source of role conception.
Perhaps because of values and conceptions they brought from teaching and
other occupations and their experiences as minorities and women in an urban
context, they have hopes for what can be accomplished for children. One
student commented that the cohort helped to “validate my own sense of
mission”.
Data from both instruments suggest candidates were influenced by a
complex system that may create tension as they develop a conception of the
principalship. They brought with them extended experience as a teacher in
which they witnessed the work of principals. This experience was both
expanding and limiting. As they developed an identity with administration,
they saw the work principals do which differs from teaching. In this way, an
administrative perspective which is broader than the classroom is reinforced[2].
At the same time, they may have witnessed principal conduct which
emphasized a custodial orientation. This behaviour focused on the
interpersonal relationships necessary for maintaining organizational stability.
During the preparation programme, they were confronted with tension
among several sources of role conception: college faculty who emphasize the
future and a school system, including mentor principals and the board of
education, who emphasize the present. In the midst of this tension, they were
left with values and norms they developed out of their own sense of mission and
the exchange and validation that came from their membership in a cohort.
Their visions of school also involved staff concerns, such as staff morale,
attendance and competence. But they included creativity and collaboration, as
well: “the way teachers want to try new ideas, collaborate with each other”.
When asked how she would evaluate herself, one student responded, “When I
walk through (the school) do I see good things happening…Do people have lots
of initiatives? Do they come to me with new ideas as well as old complaints?”
The earlier concern with test scores is also reflected in the need for teachers to
focus on outcomes and teach skills.
Although they envisaged innovative schools, these candidates recognized
political, staff and societal obstacles which may keep schools from being
creative. There are political and bureaucratic elements in school systems that
require principals to “kiss up” and to be responsive to district initiatives without
district backing. Furthermore, resistant or uncommitted teachers can prevent
the school from being effective. “We need skilled people to deal with these
problems and you need teachers who are committed. I see very few skilled
people.” “You’re tied up by union decisions; all the other things that keep you in
the same framework; (we) need different ways to see schools.” Other candidates
pointed to societal issues, such as the lack of commitment to education and the
values perpetuated by the society, over which principals have no control:
What frightens me the most is what I don’t have control over – the rest of society itself.
America doesn’t have a commitment to education. Governments don’t commit the kinds of
resources we really need if we want to be a society that does not fall apart. There are values
imparted by society to children, through media, that are almost stronger than
school’s…Schools should be a sanctuary and haven away from things like drugs.
The vision of school which these candidates described is laden with conflict.
They wanted student-centred schools but saw a possible tension between a
focus on outcomes and a focus on nurturing. They viewed schools as places
where teachers are innovative and collegial but where concern with teacher
attendance and commitment is necessary. This group came into the programme
with a sense of the societal and political constraints on schools and appears to
have only reinforced that perception.
Priorities of principals’ tasks. A principal’s role conception is defined in part
by the kinds of tasks considered important. In the entry questionnaire,
Emphasizes student learning 12 (19.0%)
A new
Innovates 6 (9.5%)
conception of the
Supports teachers’ growth 9 (14.3)
principalship
Good interpersonal skills 8 (12.7%)
Encourages collaboration 10 (15.9%)
Encourages parental involvement 3 (4.8%)
35
Good managerial skills 2 (3.2%)
Charismatic leadership traits 8 (12.7%)
Other 5 (7.9%)
Total 63 (100%) Table VI.
How candidates would
Note: statistics are based on number of mentions rather than cases
like to be described as a
principal
This candidate’s comments highlight not only how the de-emphasis on college
faculty affected a change of focus within the programme but also how the move
from the rarefied atmosphere of the programme to the reality of their school
changed their perception of the programme’s value.
The uniqueness of the programme and élite quality of the candidates created
an expectation that the board of education would quickly move members of this
group into administrative positions. In fact, one candidate said, “When we
started, we thought we would be in a special school. Being the first, if we were
all put in a special district, we could see more change.” One year after
completing the programme, however, only half of the first cohort were in
administrative positions, and the others were in their original schools.
The internship also created a change of focus. While it gave candidates
experience outside their school settings, it created an awareness of the reality of
current school life, “what’s out there; what goes on”.
Our view is that these events changed the focus for candidates in two ways.
First, it changed the focus from the future to the present. In the beginning of the
programme, candidates were concerned about how to lead the schools of
tomorrow; at the end they were concerned with how to lead the schools of today.
Second, the focus of site-based management changed from facilitating teachers’
work to being the sole authority. Although we have no data to confirm a cause-
effect relationship, we suspect that the élite quality they felt in the beginning
together with the confrontations with resistant teachers, which they
encountered during the internship, influenced this perception of themselves as
sole authorities with responsibility to develop a vision and persuade teachers to
buy it.
Cohort and continuity. The most consistent socialization mechanism
throughout this programme was the cohort. Candidates frequently mentioned,
during the exit interview, the important role that the cohort played during their
preparation experiences.
We suspect that the cohort accomplished two things for these candidates in
terms of socialization to a role conception. First, being in a cohort consistently
rekindled the feeling of being an élite. The group reinforced the initial reason
why they were chosen. Even when programme faculty changed and candidates
perceived that the programme was dominated by the board of education, they
could look to one another to remind them of their uniqueness.
Second, we believe the cohort helped candidates to reconcile the change of A new
focus. Although the present reality of schools was emphasized over future conception of the
innovation in the programme shift, the cohort reinforced their perception of principalship
themselves as change agents – as leaders of both today and tomorrow.
Conclusion
Our findings suggest implications for training principals and for research on 39
principal socialization.
Appendix
Principals Institute Survey
43
(1) When did you decide you wanted to be a teacher? (check one)
during grade school
during high school
during college
after college
(2) What circumstances led you to enter teaching?
(3) When did you decide you wanted to be a principal?
(4) What were the circumstances that led you to aspire to the principalship?
(5) What aspects of the Principals Institute led you to apply?
(6) Have you taken administration courses prior to the Principals Institute?
● If yes, what motivated you to take courses in administration?
(7) As you look back over the various jobs you have had…
● What skills as a classroom teacher or other school/district position of responsibility
have you developed that can be helpful to you as a principal?
● What skills in non-education positions have you developed that can be helpful to you as
a principal?
(8) List four adjectives you would use to describe your current principal.
(9) Briefly describe an incident illustrative of a principal whom you have worked with or
known.
(10) List four adjectives you would use to describe your ideal principal.
(11) What do you believe to be the principal’s role in a school-based management model?
(12) From your experience, what factors most determine the decisions a principal makes?
(13) What kind of experiences (school settings, training, interaction, exposures, etc.) would help
you become the type of principal you want to be?
(14) The time is 1994. You are the principal of Utopia Intermediate School. One of your staff is
a student in the Principals Institute and has been asked to describe an actual experience
illustrative of their principal. How would you like to be described?