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School leadership towards teacher job satisfaction: a case study in public secondary schools in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

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dc.contributor.advisor Smit, Brigitte
dc.contributor.author Elias Sebsibe Haile
dc.date.accessioned 2020-11-09T08:09:28Z
dc.date.available 2020-11-09T08:09:28Z
dc.date.issued 2020-05
dc.date.submitted 2020-11-09
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26828
dc.description.abstract The purpose of this study was to investigate the public secondary school leadership styles and teacher job satisfaction in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. A qualitative case study research design was employed to elicit the perception of principals and teachers to the issue under the study. Ten principals and twenty-four teachers were purposively selected to participate in the study. Data collection was done using semi- structured interview questions. Data analysis was done using ATLAS.ti version 8. The study findings revealed that there is state political interference in the public secondary school management system, the teaching-learning process and the selection of the principals. Principals were not appointed based on their qualifications and experience but rather were assigned to the position based on their political affiliation to the ruling party. The study respondents perceived that management structures such as the one to five groups, the developmental army/change army group and command post were the tools for ruling party to indoctrinate its political ideology. School secularism was not applicable; the ruling party members had continuous meetings in school and had a role in the decision-making of the school. Principals focused on political activities with teaching and learning activities being neglected and were not perceived as employing an instructional or transformational leadership style. Teachers perceived their levels of job satisfaction as very low with state political interference, bad leadership practices of principals, low salary and benefits, low social acceptance for teaching profession, bad behaviour of students, low achievement of students, government lack of attention for education and practice of corruption in other sectors being major factors. Recommendations were made and a suggested school leadership model was presented, to enhance school management effectiveness and to improve teacher job satisfaction. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (ix, 193 leaves) : color illustrations en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Secondary school en
dc.subject Principal en
dc.subject Teacher en
dc.subject Instructional leadership style en
dc.subject Transformational leadership style en
dc.subject Job satisfaction en
dc.subject One-to-five en
dc.subject Command post en
dc.subject Educational army development en
dc.subject.ddc 373.1109633
dc.subject.lcsh High school teachers -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Attitudes -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh High school teachers -- Job satisfaction -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh School principals -- Political activity -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Educational leadership -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Public schools -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh High schools -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Education, Secondary -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Teacher-principal relationships -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Case studies en
dc.title School leadership towards teacher job satisfaction: a case study in public secondary schools in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Educational Management and Leadership en
dc.description.degree D. Phil. (Education)


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