Dr. Charles Vanover worked in the Chicago Public Schools for eight years before he received a fellowship to study educational policy at the University of Michigan. Charles Vanover is co-editor for two books: Analyzing and Interpreting Qualitative Research: After the Interview, from SAGE and the forthcoming, Assessing Performance-Based Research: The Case Study of Chicago Butoh, from Springer/Nature. Charles is an associate professor in Educational Leadership at the University of South Florida where he teaches change and analysis, policy implementation, and qualitative research. He manages the YouTube Channel “The After the Interview Project Data Analysis.” After the Interview YouTube Channel

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCps_rC8IZ1T6ZxN1M1eYLrw

Session Description

Learning and Growing as a School Leader through the Practicum: Findings from the Investigating Educational Leadership Preparation Study

In this initial session from the Investigating Educational Leadership Preparation Study, we share findings related to Master’s students’ growth in the two-semester, USF School Leadership Practicum. The findings are based on eleven (11) interviews with two cohorts of recent graduates.

The instrument’s first two questions are:

  • Please describe a specific growth experience during the USF practicum from start to finish.
  • Please discuss a specific growth experience that contributed to your development as a social justice leader.

A team of USF graduate doctoral student researchers managed the protocols, conducted, and transcribed the interviews. A research team made up of one USF faculty member and one graduate researcher coded these data using a deductive and inductive coding system. A major theme shared by practicum students in their interviews was the importance of alignment between academic knowledge, state-sanctioned knowledge, field experiences, mentorship, and school support.

When students described their growth, they discussed sequences of learning activities stretched over the complex landscape of professional practice in the Florida public schools. Powerful learning activities in the practicum tended to be aligned with USF Leadership Program content and values. They were said to be coherent with the State of Florida sanctioned knowledge that guided schools’ operations. Students described how school-level mentors supported these growth-oriented, learning experiences. At RISE, the Investigating Educational Leadership Preparation Study’s graduate researchers will begin the session with a brief discussion of data collection, transcription, and first-cycle coding. The session will continue with a deductive and inductive analysis of the transcripts.

Breakout Session 4