“About Average” A Pragmatic Inquiry into School Principals’ Meanings for a Statistical Concept in Instructional Leadership

Date

2014-04

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research, University of Regina

Abstract

This mixed methods, sequential, exploratory study addresses the problem, “How

significant are statistical representations of ‘average student achievement’ for school

administrators as instructional leaders?” Both phases of the study were designed within

Charles Sanders Peirce’s pragmatic theory of interpretation.

In the first, phenomenological phase, 10 Saskatchewan school principals were

each interviewed three times and invited to read aloud three different student

achievement reports. Principals generally held a “centre-of-balance” conception for the

average, which related to perspectives deriving from their organizational position.

Abductive reasoning, a proclivity to act upon “below average” student achievement,

leadership through asking leading questions, an inquiry cast of mind, and other pragmatic

principles were clearly apparent. No evidence was found that school administrators were

constrained by normative statistics into a uniform outlook, nor into purely instrumental

behaviour.

In a succeeding, overlapping phase based in the psychophysics of perception,

Saskatchewan school leaders (principals and vice-principals) (n=210) were randomly

assigned to one of four groups and asked to read an achievement report depicting student

performance as a distribution of scores on a criterion scale. School leaders’ dispositions

to be rational-analytical or intuitive-experiential were measured pre-and post-reading. A

MANCOVA revealed small but significant changes in school leaders’ dispositions

depending on the way the report was framed. Small but significant interactions between

valence and audience on a reader’s rationality were observed. Negatively-framed test

scores effected greater changes than positively-framed test scores in diminishing school

leaders’ beliefs in their rationality. Principals’ and vice-principals’ dispositions did not

differ. I conclude that reading reports which depict student achievements within a

normative distribution has little statistical significance in changing leadership practice.

However, school principals’ interpretations demonstrate the substantial practical

significance of statistics when leading change. School administrators consider average

student achievement not with the inferential patterns assumed within contemporary

notions of heuristic irrationality, but rather as a reasoned form of inquisitive thinking and

behaviour that has been formalized and comprehensively described in North American

philosophy for over 100 years.

Description

A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Education, University of Regina. xi, 380 p.

Keywords

Citation