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This module addresses the reactions of students to a course design that includes leadership practice field activities. Students were members of a cohort in a two-year program to prepare school principals and supervisors. The use of a leadership practice field is a response to criticism of preparation programs that fail to provide aspiring administrators with the skills they will need as instructional leaders. Students were given the opportunity to have input into the design of instructional activities and then engaged in those activities. Activities were aligned with Educational Leadership Constituents Council (ELCC) and Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium (ISLLC) standards and also incorporated practice with the skills of communication, decision-making, and problem solving, among others. Students anonymously completed online surveys using open-ended prompts four times across the semester. Student responses indicated an overall positive reaction to the use of leadership practice field activities but also indicated the course could be improved with the addition of more activities and greater structure.

Introduction

University-based principal preparation programs have been criticized as failing to adequately prepare principals for their role as instructional leader [Davis, Darling-Hammond, LaPointe,&Meyerson, 2005; Levine, 2005; Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), 2006]. Levine criticized school leadership curricula as irrelevant, entrance and graduation standards as low, and faculty as weak. Dave Spence, president of the SREB, criticized university principal preparation programs as being unwilling to change at the pace necessary to improve (SREB, 2006). Davis et al. (2005) indicated there is little evidence that the types of experiences provided in principal preparation programs enable principals to be more effective. Each of these authors, and others, has offered recommendations for the improvement of preparation programs.

A common recommendation for improving preparation programs is to use field experiences to a greater extent (Davis et al., 2005; Huber, 2008; Institute for Educational Leadership, 2000; Levine, 2005; SREB, 2006). Creighton (2005) described a leadership practice field in which aspiring leaders can repeatedly practice in real, but risk-free environments, applying concepts studied in the preparation program. The leadership practice field is a promising strategy that provides aspiring principals with opportunities to explore a variety of approaches to real life problem solving, decision-making, and communication in the context of a safe educational environment.

Program and course design

Virginia Tech began their Program for the Preparation of School Principals and Supervisors in the fall of 1989 after an 18-month design period (Virginia Tech School of Education, 2010). From the outset, the program courses were designed to use performance based instructional strategies and included an internship that would span the 24 months of the program.

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Source:  OpenStax, Nature and context of educational administration. OpenStax CNX. Sep 17, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11214/1.3
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