Do your teachers trust you? Do your teachers think you have the skills to help them get better at instruction? Do they know that if a parent complains about them, you will handle the situation fairly? Are you and your teachers on the same page when it comes to student discipline?
Most of you would probably answer yes to all these questions. But your teachers, it turns out, have a more critical take.
In a nationally representative survey, the Education Week Research Center asked principals to size up themselves. Although one or two of the questions ask principals how they think teachers view them, most questions ask how principals view themselves. Using the same questions, the research center asked teachers to tell us how they see their principals.
The dueling viewpoints are striking.
While teachers and principals agree it鈥檚 important to have positive working relationships with one another, their points of view dramatically diverge on the more specific aspects of how they relate. For example, 69 percent of principals say that they 鈥渃ompletely agree鈥 that teachers at their school feel empowered to bring problems to them. But just 25 percent of teachers say the same.
Principals give themselves high marks for how they impact their school鈥檚 working and learning conditions鈥77 percent say they make a 鈥渃ompletely positive鈥 contribution to the environment, while 23 percent say they make a 鈥渟omewhat positive鈥 contribution. For teachers though, just 37 percent believe their principals make a 鈥渃ompletely positive鈥 impact on the school environment, while a combined 30 percent say their principals make either a 鈥渟omewhat negative鈥 or 鈥渃ompletely negative鈥 contribution.
So what might explain the gap in perception in a relationship as important as this?
鈥淧art of it is that teachers鈥 assessments of conditions in their school are closely wrapped up in job satisfaction and the perceptions of their work more generally,鈥 said Jason Grissom, an education professor at Vanderbilt University who studies school leadership. 鈥淚 suspect they implicitly hold leaders accountable for their more general feelings of job stress,鈥 in part because principals nowadays play such a broad role in schools as the instructional leader.
The sentiments may simply reflect the common tensions between bosses and employees across industries, but the evidence is pretty clear that a school that doesn鈥檛 have a trusted and respected leader is not going to thrive academically or otherwise.
But the responsibility for productive principal-teacher relationships can鈥檛 be shouldered by one party. For starters, sheer numbers make the principal鈥檚 side of this relationship more labor-intensive. There鈥檚 one principal. And, in most schools, dozens of teachers. And principals鈥 jobs are so complex鈥攚ith demands and pressures coming from many directions. That can make them feel like teachers hold them responsible for things they may have little control over, Grissom says.
As the nature and demands of the principal鈥檚 job have rapidly evolved, the relationships they build and nurture with teachers are arguably the most essential element of their own success and that of their school. It鈥檚 a big鈥攁nd critical鈥攃ommitment.
While our survey results don鈥檛 capture the nuanced, day-to-day nurturing that many principals invest in their teachers, they do represent a big-picture view of the principal-teacher dynamic, that, at the very least, show that principals need to find ways to get a good鈥攁nd more objective鈥攔ead on how their teachers actually see them.
Said Grissom: 鈥淭hese gaps are important to pay attention to. How principals perceive themselves day-to-day, versus how their teachers experience their leadership. Principals need that self reflection.鈥
There鈥檚 just too much at stake if they don鈥檛.
Sincerely,
Lesli A. Maxwell
Executive Project Editor