Elementary and secondary principals were surveyed to better understand their perceptions of the roles and impact of specialized literacy professionals (e.g., reading specialists, coaches) in their schools. A 32-question survey was completed by 103 Pennsylvania principals across elementary and secondary school contexts. Findings include distinct differences reported between roles of reading/literacy specialists and coaches, with few differences noted within roles, across elementary and secondary levels. The frequency and type of specialized literacy professional activities aligned with those principals deemed most important to literacy program improvement. Results indicated that surveyed principals viewed their specialized literacy professionals as having an important influence on literacy teaching and learning. The results have implications for those who prepare specialized literacy professionals and those who employ them. These findings corroborate and update earlier studies of specialized literacy professionals that described their multiple roles, including that of sharing in the leadership of the school’s literacy program.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Principals’ Perspectives on the Roles of Specialized Literacy Professionals
Rita M. Bean
University of Pittsburgh
Allison Swan Dagen
West Virginia University
Jacy Ippolito
Salem State University
Diane Kern
University of Rhode Island
ONLINE: Oct 18, 2018
ARTICLE CITATION
Rita M. Bean, Allison Swan Dagen, Jacy Ippolito, and Diane Kern, "Principals’ Perspectives on the Roles of Specialized Literacy Professionals," The Elementary School Journal 119, no. 2 (December 2018): 327-350.
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