Title: CULTURE AND CLIMATE IN SCHOOLS
1CHAPTER 5
- CULTURE AND CLIMATE IN SCHOOLS
2The behavior of a group cannot be predicted
solely from an understanding of the personality
of each member. Various social processes
intervenethe group develops a mood, and
atmosphere. In the context of the organization,
we talk a bout a style, a culture, a
character. Mintzberg
I wish Jake would get his hand off me!
3Culture
- Definition A system of shared orientations that
hold the unit together and give it a distinctive
identity - Created by a groups or organizations norms,
shared values and basic assumptions - The significance of an event is more about what
the event means than the actual event
4Levels of Culture
5Norms
- Usually unwritten and informal expectations of a
group or organization - Can be communicated by stories and ceremonies
- People are usually rewarded when they conform to
norms and punished when they do not conform - Examples wearing a tie to work, respecting the
administration
6Values
- Beliefs of what is desirable
- Often define what members should do to be
successful and what standards to uphold in the
organization - Define basic character and give an organization a
sense of identity - Core Values dominate values shared and accepted
by the majority of organizational members - Example an organization giving retirement
benefits to reward long term employment
7Strong Cultures
- Beliefs and values held intensity, shared widely
and guide organizational behavior - Can be a positive or negative aspect in time of
change. If a culture is so set in their ways and
resistant to change, change is unlikely to occur - Example A department who has taught their way
for years refusing to teach to the standards.
8Tacit Assumptions
- Definition abstract premises about the nature
of human relationships, human nature, truth,
reality and environment - Deepest level of culture
- Members share a view of the world, their place in
it and their way to cope with external factors - These ideas are valued and passed on to new
members - Highly resistant to change
- Example A school who believes their teachers
are motivated, responsible and capable of
governing themselves
9Functions of Culture
- Culture has boundary-defining function it
creates distinctions among organizations - Culture provides the organization with a sense of
identity - Culture facilitates the development of commitment
to the group - Culture enhances stability of the social system
- Culture is the social glue that binds the
organization together it provides the
appropriate standards for behavior.
10Primary Elements that Shape Culture
- Innovation the degree to which employees are
expected to be creative and take risks. - Stability the degree to which activities focus
on the status quo rather than change. - Attention to detail the degree to which there is
a concern for precision and detail. - Outcome orientation the degree to which
management emphasizes results. - People orientation the degree to which
management decisions are sensitive to
individuals. - Team orientation the degree of emphasis on
collaboration and teamwork. - Aggressiveness the degree to which employees are
expected to be competitive rather than easygoing.
11Symbolshelp indentify cultural themes
- Stories narrative truth with some fiction
- Myths Belief demonstrated through fiction
- Legends Stories retold again and again with
fictional details - Icon Physical artifact (mottos, trophies)
- Rituals Routine ceremonies (faculty meeting)
12Analysis of School Culture
- Schools with strong cultures of efficacy, trust
and academic optimism provide higher levels of
student achievement
13A Culture of Efficacy
- Collective Teacher Efficacy the shared
perception of teachers in a school that the
efforts of the faculty as a whole will have a
positive effect on students - At the cultural level, this is a set of beliefs
or social perceptions that are strengthened
through their use and give a school a distinctive
identity
14Sources of Collective Efficacy
15Analysis of the Teaching Task Assessment of
Teaching Competence
- Sources of Efficacy
- Mastery of Experience
- Social Persuasion
- Affective Status
Analyses, Attributions, and Interpretations
Estimation of Collective Teacher Efficacy
- Consequences of Collective Efficacy
- Effort
- Persistence
- Success
Performance
16Formation of Collective Efficacy
17Collective Efficacy
- Research Findings
- Strong school culture of efficacy leads to the
acceptance of challenging goals, strong
organizational effort, and persistence that leads
to better performance.
18A Culture of Trust
- Trust is a little like air No one thinks much
about it until it is needed and is not there. - Important in that
- Facilitates Cooperation
- Enhances Openness
- Promotes Group Cohesiveness
- Improves Student Achievement
19Faculty Trust
- This is a teachers willingness to be vulnerable
to another party based on the confidence that the
latter party is benevolent , reliable, competent,
honest and open. - Culture of trust can be measured based on degree
of faculty trust in - a.) parents students b.) principal
- c.) principal
20Faculty Trust Cont.
High Student Parent Trust
21Measuring Faculty Trust
- Administer the Omnibus T-Scale to all Faculty
- Use following fomulas to calculate score
- Standard Score for Trust in Clients (TCl)
100(TCl-3.53)/.621500 - Standard Score for Trust in the Principal (TP)
100(TP-4.42)/.725500 - Standard Score for Trust in Colleagues (TCo)
100(TCo-4.46)/.443500 - Add all 3 and compare against standard
performance index of other schools
22Academic Optimism
- The beliefs about the strengths and capabilities
in schools that helps promote optimism. This in
turn promotes both effectiveness and trust with
an academic emphasis
23Academic Emphasis
Collective Efficacy
24Culture of Control
25Pupil Control Findings
Custodial School Climate
- Greater Teacher Disengagement
- Lower Levels of Moral
- More Close Supervision by the Principal
- More Alienated Students
- Greater Student Vandalism
- More Violent Incidents
- More Suspensions
Changes towards Humanistic are slow and often
unsuccessful
26(No Transcript)
27Frames For Viewing School Climate
Openness
Health
Citizenship
28A Climate of Organizational Openness
- Halpin and Croft (1962) began mapping the domain
of organizational climate of schools because the
concept of morale did not provide an adequate
explanation for schools differing markedly in
their feel - Developed the Organizational Climate Description
Questionnaire (OCDQ) to measure important aspects
of teacher-teacher and teacher-principal
interactions - There are now three contemporary versions of
OCDQ one for elementary, one for middle schools,
and one for high schools (see tables 5.3 and
5.4)
29OPEN CLIMATE
Principal Teachers
Listens and is open to teacher suggestions Gives genuine and frequent praise Respects professional competency of faculty Gives teachers freedom to perform without close scrutiny Provides leadership behavior Supports open and professional interactions among faculty (high collegial relations) Teachers know each other well and are close personal friends (high intimacy) Cooperate and are committed to their work
- OCDQs provide valid and reliable means to map
openness behaviors of teachers and administrators
in schools - The open climate is marked by cooperation and
respect within the faculty and between the
faculty and principal - Behavior of both principal and faculty is both
open and authentic
30CLOSED CLIMATE
Principal Teachers
Principal stresses routine trivia and unnecessary busywork (high restrictiveness) Ineffective leadership seen as controlling and rigid (high directiveness), also unsympathetic, unconcerned, and unresponsive Non-supportive, inflexible, and hindering (low supportiveness) Faculty responds minimally, exhibits little commitment (high disengagement) Faculty that is divisive, intolerant, and apathetic Low intimacy and no collegial relations
- Virtually the antithesis of the open climate
- Principal and teachers simply appear to go
through the motions - These misguided tactics are accompanied by
frustration and apathy, but also by a general
suspicion and lack of respect of teachers for
each other as either friends or professionals
31Discussion
- OPEN OR CLOSED?
- Which type of climate do you think exists at
your school? - (Use the appropriate OCDQ to determine the
openness of your school climate.)
32OCDQ Research Findings
- Studies demonstrated that schools with openness
- have less sense of student alienation toward the
school and its personnel - Have stronger principals who are more confident,
self-secure, cheerful, sociable, and resourceful - Teachers who express greater confidence in their
own and the schools effectiveness (are more
loyal and satisfied) - Generates more organizational commitment to the
school - Positively related to teacher participation in
decision making - Positively related to ratings of school
effectiveness - Positively related to student achievement in
mathematics, reading, and writing in middle
schools
33A CLIMATE OF ORGANIZATIONAL HEALTH
- Calls attention to conditions that facilitate
growth and development or those that impede
healthy org. dynamics - A school with a healthy org. climate copes
successfully with its environment as it mobilizes
its resources and efforts to achieve its goals - The org. health of secondary schools is defined
by seven specific interaction patterns in
schools. They meet the needs of the social
system and represent the three levels of
responsibility and control within the school.
(Table 5.5)
34 Healthy Schools Unhealthy Schools
Protected from unreasonable community and parental pressures The board resists efforts of vested interest groups to influence policy Principal provides dynamic leadership (both task and relations oriented) Is also supportive of teachers, yet provides direction and maintains high standards. Moreover, they have influence with their superiors and the ability to exercise independent thought and action. Teachers are committed to teaching and learning, set high but achievable goals, maintain high standards, and the learning environment is orderly and serious Students work hard on academics, are highly motivated, and respect other students who achieve academically Classroom supplies and instructional materials are accessible Teachers like and trust each other, are enthusiastic about the work, and are proud of their school Vulnerable to destructive forces Teachers and administrators are bombarded with reasonable demands from parental and community groups Principal does not provide leadership, little direction, limited consideration and support for teachers, virtually no influence with superiors Morale of teachers is low Teachers do not feel good about each other or their jobs. They act aloof, suspicious, and defensive. The press for academic excellence is limited Everyone is simply putting in time
35OHI and Research Findings
- OHI (Organizational Health Index) can measure
health of a school. Administered to professional
staff. - Three valid and reliable contemporary versions
available online one for each school level. - Consistent with many characteristics of effective
schools - A correlation between the openness and health of
schools (open schools tend to be healthy and
healthy schools tend to be open) - Healthy schools have high trust, high esprit, low
disengagement, and more committed teachers - Research also shows that org. health is
positively related to student performance (higher
achievement levels, lower dropout rates, higher
student commitment)
36A CLIMATE OF CITIZENSHIP
- Another frame for viewing the climate of a school
in terms of the citizenship behavior of its
members - Organizational citizenship is behavior that goes
beyond the formal responsibilities of the role by
actions that occur freely to help others achieve
the task at hand - Citizenship behavior has five specific aspects
altruism, conscientiousness, sportsmanship,
courtesy, and civic virtues (Table 5.6) - Prototype of a climate of citizenship is a school
in which teachers help each other and new
colleagues by giving freely of their own time - Measured by Org. Citizenship Behavior (OCB) scale
37OCB Research Findings
- OCB is another useful tool for measuring another
important aspect of school climate. - Organizational citizenship is positively related
to collegial principal behavior, teacher
professionalism, academic press, and school
mindfulness. - Schools with high degrees of citizenship are more
effective and have higher levels of student
achievement.
38CHANGING THE CULTURE AND CLIMATE OF SCHOOLS
- Long term systemic effort is more likely to
produce change than short-term fads. - Three general strategies for change
- Clinical Strategy
- Growth-centered
- Normative Procedure
39The Clinical Strategy
- Focuses on the nature of relationships among the
schools subgroups - The manipulation of the intergroup and
interpersonal interactions can foster change - Proceeds through the following steps
- 1. Gaining knowledge of the org. through
careful observation, analysis, and study (using
OCDQ, OHI, and OHB) -
- 2. Diagnosis, providing labels for diagnosing
potential trouble areas (ex. Poor morale, high
disengagement, etc.) -
- 3. Prognosis, clinician judges seriousness of
situation and develops a set of operational
strategies to improve the situation -
- 4. Prescription, How can the situation be
remedied? Taking necessary steps -
- 5. Evaluation, evaluate the extent to which
prescriptions have been implemented and are
successful
40The Growth-Centered Strategy
- Involves the acceptance of a set of assumptions
about the development of school personnel as a
basis for administrative decision making - The assumptions are
- 1. Change is the property of healthy school
organizations. - 2. Change has direction. (can be positive or
negative, progressive or - regressive)
- 3. Change should imply progress. (should
provide movement of org. - toward its goals)
- 4. Teachers have high potential for the
development and - implementation of change. (principals
are always ready to provide - teachers with more freedom and
responsibility in the operation of the - school)
41A Norm-Changing Strategy
42Resources
- All OCDQ, OHI, and OCB instruments, scoring
instructions, and interpretations (for
elementary, middle, and high school levels) are
available online for use at - www.coe.ohio-state.edu/whoy