Back to Search Start Over

Leading Teaching and Learning Together: The Role of the Middle Tier. What Do Effective Instructional Leaders at the Middle Tier Do? Research Brief. Instructional Leaders at the Middle Tier. No. 2

Authors :
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France), International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP)
Education Development Trust (United Kingdom)
Tournier, Barbara
Chimier, ChloƩ
Childress, David
Jones, Charlotte
Source :
UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning. 2023.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

To improve teaching and learning outcomes, teachers and head teachers need whole-system support to build professionalism and enhance their practice. Roles at the middle tier of education systems, or those professionals working between the school and central level, offer unique capacities to facilitate collaboration, broker knowledge, scale innovations, and provide instructional direction to school-level practitioners. This research explores how middle-tier instructional leaders can become a nexus for change to improve the quality of education. It focuses on highlighting promising practices globally and is designed to draw out insights and lessons for both policy-makers and practitioners. Case studies were conducted in five jurisdictions -- Delhi (India), Jordan, Rwanda, Shanghai (China), and Wales -- where new roles have been created or existing roles re-oriented towards coaching and support. The studies explored the professional practices and perceived impacts of instructional leaders, and the enabling factors present in the systems in which they work. This brief is part two of a three-part series focusing on the professional practices of instructional leaders at the middle tier and how they bring about change in teaching and learning. The other briefs introduce the middle tier and how to make middle-tier roles effective. [For brief 1, see ED629430. For brief 3, see ED629428.]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
ED629429
Document Type :
Reports - Research