Ķvlog

School & District Management

Experts Debate High School Leadership Needs

By Lynn Olson — October 12, 2004 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

Improving high schools has proved much tougher than changing elementary schools, but does it require fundamentally different leadership?

That was one of the basic questions pondered at a conference here last week on high school leadership.

“I think part of the problem when we’re dealing with high schools is we think the kids and the issues we’re dealing with are just bigger and more numerous,” said Richard Laine, the director of education programs for the Wallace Foundation.

is available online from the .

Speaking at the conference, “Preparing Today’s Leaders for Tomorrow’s High Schools,” Mr. Laine contended that at least some of the issues are also different. The Oct. 3-5 conference was sponsored by the Washington-based Alliance for Excellent Education, a policy, research, and advocacy group whose mission is to ensure every child graduates from high school prepared for a productive future.

During the meeting, the alliance also released a collection of essays on secondary school leadership.

Richard Laine

High schools now are being asked to prepare all young people to succeed in postsecondary education and training when, historically, their task has been to prepare only a select few, participants at the meeting noted. Yet in urban districts, in particular, many students enter 9th grade reading well below grade level.

Closing that gap, said Michele Cahill, a senior counselor to the chancellor of the New York City public schools, “is going to require systems to go way beyond tinkering.”

New York, for example, opened 55 new small high schools this fall as part of the city’s plans to establish a “portfolio” of schools from which students can choose. While there’s more to a good school than just its size, Ms. Cahill said, “I think small is the platform” that will permit the formation of powerful developmental communities for young people.

She argued that large, departmentalized high schools are not conducive to fostering close, caring relationships between students and adults. In her view, they also discourage collective accountability for the development of teenagers. “As a teacher, I don’t even know who else is teaching the students who I am concerned about,” she said.

Student Engagement Vital

But Pedro Noguera, a professor at New York University’s school of education, warned that many districts are “moving at the speed of sound to create as many schools as they can … with very little focus at all on quality and very little clarity about what it is we’re trying not to reproduce.”

One of the critical tasks facing high schools, he and others said, is to engage students.

Pedro Noguera

“People pretend that if the adults do everything right, the kids will fall in line, as if kids themselves don’t make choices,” said Mr. Noguera.

His research has found that many teenagers feel deeply alienated from a school environment in which they are not known well or connected to adults who care about them. “Unless we have some way of engaging the youngsters themselves, “Mr. Noguera said, “nothing will work.”

Students also complain that they are bored in classes that rely primarily on lecturing and give them few opportunities to contribute, he said.

Changing that situation requires fundamental changes both in the structure of high schools and in how teaching and learning occur in classrooms. Too many times, Mr. Noguera argued, high school reform efforts focus on everything except instruction.

Yet “instructional leadership,” a popular term in education policy, is much more complicated at the high school level than in elementary schools, participants said.

High school principals have to lead instruction in numerous subjects in which they are not themselves experts, said Sandra J. Stein, the academic dean of the New York City Leadership Academy. In large high schools, they often have to work within a cabinet and department structure that places several layers between them and the teaching and learning inside classrooms.

“If you frame the role of instructional leader, it is a very different project than at the elementary level,” Ms. Stein said. “There are a number of ways in which the conversation you’re structuring is a completely different conversation, and the type of knowledge base you need to have is completely different.”

A major challenge is how to address the literacy needs of students who enter high school reading well below grade level. High school teachers, who view themselves as subject-matter experts, are ill-equipped to address reading, writing, and speaking skills across the curriculum, participants in the conference said.

Managing Change

While highlighting such differences, however, participants also pointed out a number of similarities in the leadership tasks across all levels of K-12 education. Those include setting clear, high expectations for all students; focusing on good instruction, especially in reading and mathematics; identifying and supporting high-caliber teachers; and reaching out to and engaging the community.

Leaders also have to figure out how to manage the change pro cess itself.

“It’s the leading-change aspect that we don’t hear a lot about,” Mr. Laine said.

Particularly given the scope of changes needed in high schools, the experts here said, it will take more than the tenure of one superintendent to bring the transformation to fruition. Yet education has paid little attention to issues of succession and how to maintain improvements during a transitional period.

Those at the conference also cautioned that states and districts need to revise both the systems for identifying and preparing future leaders and the conditions under which leaders work, so that they have a better chance of being effective.

“We ask a lot of our school leaders,” said Mr. Laine, “and then give them almost none of the authority to bring it off.”

Related Tags:

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special Education Webinar
Hidden Costs of Special Ed Vacancies: Solutions for Your District
When provider vacancies hit, students feel it first. Hear what district leaders are doing to keep IEP-related services on track.
Content provided by 
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Privacy & Security Webinar
How Technology Is Reshaping Childhood
How do we protect kids online while embracing innovation? Learn about navigating safety, privacy, and opportunity in the Digital Age.
Content provided by 
Budget & Finance Webinar Creative Approaches to K-12 Budget Realities
What are districts prioritizing in 2026? New survey data reveals emerging K-12 budgeting trends.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

School & District Management Practical and Paced: How Principals Like Their PD Served Up
Principal PD must reflect the demands and constraints of the job.
5 min read
A high school principal gives a high-five to an incoming junior at the school, as upper-level students return on their first day of school in Brattleboro, Vt., on Aug. 28, 2025.
A high school principal gives a high-five to an incoming junior at the school, as upper-level students return on their first day of school in Brattleboro, Vt., on Aug. 28, 2025. Principals need access to frequent and relevant professional development opportunities to tackle the rising complexities of the job.
Kristopher Radder/The Brattleboro Reformer via AP
School & District Management A New Survey Shows What a State Gets Right and Wrong for Its School Leaders
The group behind it hopes statewide results help district leaders do their jobs better.
5 min read
Edenton, N.C. - September 5th, 2025: Sonya Rinehart, principal at John A. Holmes High School, coordinates with other faculty members on a walkie talkie during in the hallway during class change.
A principal at a high school in Edenton, N.C., coordinates with other faculty members on a walkie talkie during in the hallway during class change on Sept. 5, 2025. School leaders in the state say they are happy with their districts but need more support and learning opportunities.
Cornell Watson for Education Week
School & District Management High Diesel Prices and Schools: How Districts Are Keeping Buses on the Road
A new survey of school district leaders breaks down what they're already doing to keep buses running.
Gas prices are displayed at a gas station in Wheeling, Ill., on May 14, 2026.
Prices on display at a gas station in Wheeling, Ill., on May 14, 2026. Most school districts in a new survey say they're over budget for fuel costs as prices, particularly for diesel needed to keep school buses running, remain high as the Iran war continues.
Nam Y. Huh/AP
School & District Management Schools Brace for Impact as Fuel Prices Climb
Districts are tightening budgets as transporting students and heating buildings grow more costly.
A full lot of parked school buses
School buses are parked at the Dayton Public Transportation center on Thursday, August 21, 2025 in Dayton, Ohio. School districts are already feeling the strain on their budgets as they buy diesel at elevated prices for their school buses.
Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos/AP