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Document Description
Title
A
study
of
leadership
theory
and
practice
based
on
Bush's
Six
models
of
leadership
Author
Durdle
,
Diana
E.
,
1967-
Description
Thesis
(M.Ed.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1998.
Education
Date
1998
Pagination
ix, 124 leaves : ill.
Subject
Bush
,
Tony;
Educational
leadership;
School
management
and
organization
Degree
M.Ed.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Education
Discipline
Education
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
83-89.
Abstract
The
first
purpose
of this
survey
research
study
is
to
administer
the
Brown
and
Sheppard
survey
to
establish
its
reliability
and
whether
it
is
useful
in
explaining
leadership
practices
in
schools.
Bush
(1995)
categorizes
each
of the
six
models:
formal
,
collegial
,
cultural
,
subjective
,
political
or
ambiguity
, as
either
descriptive
or
normative
in
nature.
Therefore
, a
second
purpose
of the
study
is
to
determine
the
validity
of these
categorizations.
A
third
and
final
purpose
of the
research
study
is
to
determine
which
models
exist
in the
schools
studied
and how
consistent
the
existing
models
are with the
emerging
concept
of the
learning
organization.
All
teachers
and
administrators
currently
working
in the
four
schools
in this
province
were
asked
to
complete
a
sixty-item
questionnaire.
Sixty-one
individuals
were
surveyed
and the
response
rate
was
sixty-seven
percent.
The
survey
was
,
indeed
,
reliable
with the
removal
of
five
items
to
increase
the
reliability
of
formal
and
subjective
models.
The
study
confirmed
that the
leadership
constructs
described
by
Bush
were
useful
for
discussing
leadership
in
schools.
The
prevailing
models
of
leadership
in the
schools
were as
follows:
School
One
,
cultural
,
School
Two
,
formal
,
School
Three
,
cultural
and
collegial
and
School
Four
, has
no
descriptive
model
of
leadership
practice.
The
prevailing
model
of
leadership
in
three
schools
was
categorized
as
descriptive
in this
specific
study.
All
models
of
leadership
in
School
Four
were
normative;
therefore
, a
descriptive
,
observable
model
of
leadership
did
not
exist.
The
disciplines
associated
with the
development
of
learning
organizations:
personal
mastery
,
mental
models
,
systems
thinking
,
team
learning
, and
shared
vision
were
investigated
in an
attempt
to
discover
whether
elements
of
management
associated
with
organizational
learning
were
present
in any of the
four
schools
in the
study.
The
existence
of these
specific
elements
of
management
may
provide
the
necessary
framework
to
achieve
the
development
and
maintenance
of a
learning
organization.
Leadership
for
effective
,
positive
change
will
require
leaders
with the
ability
to
motivate
others
to
actively
participate
in
culture
building
and
maintenance.
The
elements
of
management
associated
with
organizational
learning
are
present
in
two
of the
schools
in this
study.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1272850
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(13.84
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Durdle_DianaE.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
269894.cpd