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Susanne Sahlin – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2025
A growing body of research has emphasised the importance of school leadership for quality improvement in schools, which reinforces the importance of school leaders' continuous professional development in working life. However, less is known about the professional development of experienced principals. Against this background, the purpose of this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Principals, Management Development, Courses
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Karnopp, Jennifer R. – Voices of Reform, 2020
Regional professional learning networks support school change by linking principals to others engaged in similar change work. While increasingly prevalent, little is known about the factors that contribute to the formation of ties between network members, or how knowledge moves across the network. Using social network analysis, this study examined…
Descriptors: Principals, Social Networks, Network Analysis, Institutional Characteristics
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Baron, Louis; Morin, Lucie – Human Resource Development Quarterly, 2009
Numerous authors have suggested that the working relationship between coach and coachee constitutes an essential condition to the success of executive coaching. This study empirically investigated the links between the coach-coachee relationship and the success of a coaching intervention in an organizational setting. Data were collected from two…
Descriptors: Management Development, Self Efficacy, Coaching (Performance), Interprofessional Relationship
George, Penny; Kummerow, Jean – Training, 1981
Discusses the advantages and hazards of mentoring. Describes the qualities of a good mentor and of a good protege. Also gives strategies for selecting a good mentor. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Interprofessional Relationship, Management Development, Mentors
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Bolton, Robert – Career Development International, 1998
Unlike traditional management development, use of conversations in coaching high-performance work teams addresses core processes of speaking and listening. Management of conversations aims to create learning that will lead to breakthroughs in team performance. (SK)
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Interprofessional Relationship, Listening, Management Development
Atkinson, Charles; And Others – Personnel Journal, 1980
In a dynamic management development program, effective managers can be trained by other employees enacting the roles of coaches, sponsors, and mentors. By encouraging these relationships, the organization can produce better managers in a less random way. (SK)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Interprofessional Relationship, Management Development, Mentors
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Solomons, Helen H.; Cramer, Aubrey – Management Education and Development, 1985
Discusses the three "hurdles" that a new female manager must "jump" to be accepted as a colleague by her male peers: trust, dependence, and social role. The authors list a series of tips to help women over these hurdles. (CT)
Descriptors: Females, Interprofessional Relationship, Management Development, Sex Differences
Drury, William R. – Spectrum, 1988
The Dayton (Ohio) City School District initiated a very successful pilot induction program for entry-year administrators in January 1987. Nine special workshops were planned to train both volunteer mentors and entry-year administrators in such areas as personal development, conflict management, problem identification and solution, time management,…
Descriptors: Administrator Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, Inservice Education, Interprofessional Relationship
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Bates, R. Clifton; Shank, Joanne G. – NASSP Bulletin, 1983
The Miamisburg (Ohio) City School District found that--through clarification of administrative style, definition of responsibilities, and acceptance by other administrators--the associate principal is a more effective school leader, administrative team member, and community liaison than is the usual assistant principal. (Author/RW)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, Assistant Principals, Elementary Secondary Education
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Kimball, Richard O. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1993
The Electric Maze is an interactive learning device that promotes group learning skills among management teams. It provides a "practice field" where participants can explore and apply the principles of effective teamwork under realistic conditions of uncertainty, discomfort, and mistakes. This training aims to enable management teams to…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Experiential Learning, Group Dynamics, Interprofessional Relationship
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Snell, Robin; And Others – Management Education and Development, 1991
Includes "Joining Forces" (Lindamood); "Spiritual Dimension of the Learning Organisation" (Hawkins); "Management--A 'Spiritual' Foundation?" (Nevard); "Hermit in Organisations" (Murray); "Towards a Spiritual Perspective on Behavior at Work" (Henson); "On Uncertainty" (Adlam); "Spirituality in Organisations" (Lee); "Ecological Organisation" (Conn);…
Descriptors: Christianity, Ethics, Holistic Approach, Interprofessional Relationship
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Martin, Shan – Group and Organization Studies, 1982
Describes experiences in assisting native management trainers in Bahrain improve management training programs. Discusses characteristics of people and organizations, program design, relationships with resident trainers, training preferences and learning styles of managers, and language and communication. (RC)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Cognitive Style, Cross Cultural Training, Foreign Countries
Nelson, John L. – School Business Affairs, 1997
Offers suggestions for improving administrative interpersonal skills, which are just as, if not more important, than technical skills. (LMI)
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Communication Skills, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Relations
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Pritchett, JoAnn H. – NASSP Bulletin, 1986
A principal and assessor for an Alabama school system describes the professional benefits of her experience with the NASSP Assessment Center Project: peer interaction, informal exchanges, and close personal contact with five other practicing administrators. (TE)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Education, Administrator Evaluation, Assessment Centers (Personnel)
Sargent, Alice G. – Training and Development Journal, 1983
The movement of women into the managerial work force has created a new culture in organizations, changing men's and women's relationships and generating pressure to find new ways for them to relate. This calls for blending the best of each gender to produce what is often called androgynous management. (SSH)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Androgyny, Employed Women
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