Educational leadership competence training of school principals (2015-2020)
Keywords:
distributed leadership, educational leadership competence, training strategy, school principalsAbstract
Introduction: In Cuba, the training of teaching personnel has been a concern from the very triumph of the Cuban Revolution to the present, as has been the training and improvement of those who direct these teachers. The study carried out on the formation of educational leadership in the school principals of the Morón municipality, Cuba, shows that they have shortcomings in their preparation to perform efficiently. Objectives: Characterize the educational leadership competence of school principals. Develop a strategy to form educational leadership competence in school principals.Methods: A methodology is used for the construction of the theoretical construct of educational leadership competence of school principals: Bibliographic Review, Virtual Debate Forum, Discussion Groups, Diagnosis of Practice and Ibero American Experts' Judgment (35); this last method made it possible to create of the Ibero American Network of Leadership and Educational Practices (RILPE).
Results and Discussion: Contributions are made to the training of school principals (2015-2020). In a general way, the management style is studied, as well as the influence they exert on the membership of educational institutions and the training processes of directive leadership in Ibero America. A leadership training strategy was developed taking into account the improvement, research and methodological work as access routes to the training of the cadres. The scientific result was validated through expert judgment. Its implementation was evaluated through the index of group satisfaction.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The journal Anales de la Academia de Ciencias de Cuba protects copyright, and operates with a Creative Commons License 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License 4.0). By publishing in it, authors allow themselves to copy, reproduce, distribute, publicly communicate their work and generate derivative works, as long as the original author is cited and acknowledged. They do not allow, however, the use of the original work for commercial or lucrative purposes.
The authors authorize the publication of their writings, retaining the authorship rights, and assigning and transferring to the magazine all the rights protected by the intellectual property laws that govern in Cuba, which imply editing to disseminate the work.
Authors may establish additional agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in the journal (for example, placing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a book), with recognition of having been first published in this journal.
To learn more, see https://creativecommons.org