We Can't Afford to Lose Leaders: Professional Development to Increase Administrator Retention during the First Few Years. Research Brief
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| Title: | We Can't Afford to Lose Leaders: Professional Development to Increase Administrator Retention during the First Few Years. Research Brief |
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| Language: | English |
| Authors: | Robyn Kelton, Teri Talan, McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership at National Louis University |
| Source: | McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership at National Louis University. 2023. |
| Availability: | McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership at National Louis University. 6200 Capital Drive, Wheeling, IL 60090. Tel: 847-947-5063; Fax: 847-947-5063; e-mail: McCormickCenter@nl.edu; Web site: https://mccormickcenter.nl.edu/ |
| Peer Reviewed: | N |
| Page Count: | 8 |
| Publication Date: | 2023 |
| Document Type: | Reports - Research |
| Education Level: | Early Childhood Education |
| Descriptors: | Early Childhood Education, Professional Development, Beginning Principals, Labor Turnover, Leadership Training, Program Effectiveness, Persistence, Administrator Role, Administrator Attitudes |
| Geographic Terms: | Illinois |
| Abstract: | The field of early childhood education and care (ECEC) has an educator retention problem (NAEYC, 2021). While the field's administrator retention crisis is less publicized, it is arguably no less important. Administrators are the gatekeepers to program quality and the linchpin for an array of program functions that impact staff satisfaction and retention, including hiring and orienting new staff, supervising and promoting current staff, managing program finances, creating a shared mission and vision, and setting the overall tone for the organizational climate (Bloom & Abel, 2015; Doherty et al., 2015; Douglass, 2019; Sims et al., 2015; Talan et al., 2014). Moreover, research in the K-12 education sector has repeatedly found that principal turnover is tied to teacher turnover (e.g., Béteille et al., 2012; Buckman, 2021; Miller, 2013). One way in which the McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership has worked to support novice ECEC administrators is through the Ready to Lead Leadership Academy (RTL). RTL was created as an intensive, four-month leadership academy to meet the needs of new and novice early childhood administrators. Additionally, the RTL curriculum was strategically aligned with competencies within the Illinois Director Credential, part of the Illinois Gateways to Opportunity professional development system. The Center has conducted seven cohorts of RTL with 119 novice administrators from across Illinois completing the academy. At the conclusion of the seventh cohort, the McCormick Center conducted an external evaluation report on the effectiveness of the RTL academy (Hadi-Tabassum & Beaudoin Ryan, 2023). This research brief focuses on two of four of the main research questions addressed in the evaluation: (1) if RTL meets the unique needs of novice administrators and (2) the potential impact of RTL on administrators' own commitment to the field, support for professional development for teaching staff, and future staff retention. |
| Abstractor: | ERIC |
| Entry Date: | 2024 |
| Accession Number: | ED647644 |
| Database: | ERIC |
| Abstract: | The field of early childhood education and care (ECEC) has an educator retention problem (NAEYC, 2021). While the field's administrator retention crisis is less publicized, it is arguably no less important. Administrators are the gatekeepers to program quality and the linchpin for an array of program functions that impact staff satisfaction and retention, including hiring and orienting new staff, supervising and promoting current staff, managing program finances, creating a shared mission and vision, and setting the overall tone for the organizational climate (Bloom & Abel, 2015; Doherty et al., 2015; Douglass, 2019; Sims et al., 2015; Talan et al., 2014). Moreover, research in the K-12 education sector has repeatedly found that principal turnover is tied to teacher turnover (e.g., Béteille et al., 2012; Buckman, 2021; Miller, 2013). One way in which the McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership has worked to support novice ECEC administrators is through the Ready to Lead Leadership Academy (RTL). RTL was created as an intensive, four-month leadership academy to meet the needs of new and novice early childhood administrators. Additionally, the RTL curriculum was strategically aligned with competencies within the Illinois Director Credential, part of the Illinois Gateways to Opportunity professional development system. The Center has conducted seven cohorts of RTL with 119 novice administrators from across Illinois completing the academy. At the conclusion of the seventh cohort, the McCormick Center conducted an external evaluation report on the effectiveness of the RTL academy (Hadi-Tabassum & Beaudoin Ryan, 2023). This research brief focuses on two of four of the main research questions addressed in the evaluation: (1) if RTL meets the unique needs of novice administrators and (2) the potential impact of RTL on administrators' own commitment to the field, support for professional development for teaching staff, and future staff retention. |
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