School Administrator Efficacy: Assessment of Beliefs About Knowledge and Skills for Successful School Leadership
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Published:2007
Daniel L. McCollum, Lawrence T. Kajs, 2007. "School Administrator Efficacy: Assessment of Beliefs About Knowledge and Skills for Successful School Leadership", Teaching Leaders to Lead Teachers, Saran Donahoo, Richard C. Hunter
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While facing challenges and crises in the leadership of schools, school administrators need to have three vital characteristics: up-to-date knowledge, relevant skills, and sound dispositions. Self-referent dispositions that refer to thoughts and feelings about one's knowledge and skills play a key role in the success of professionals in carrying out day-to-day activities. One self-referent construct is self-efficacy, which pertains to a person's confidence in their knowledge and skills. This chapter discusses social cognitive theory, in general, and self-efficacy, in particular, to describe how the self-efficacy construct is relevant to school administrators’ ability to lead schools.
