DOI: 10.30828/real.1837906 ISSN: 2564-7261

Principals’ Instructional Leadership and Teachers’ Classroom Practices: A Mixed-Methods Study in Ethiopian Rural and Urban Schools

Zinabu Tesfaye, Dawit Edamo, Misganu Legesse Bareke
Effective instructional leadership is crucial for improving student achievement, yet its implementation varies significantly across contexts, particularly in managing instructional programs. This sequential explanatory mixed-methods study examines how urban-rural context shapes principals' instructional leadership in Ethiopia's Gedeo Zone, where Grade 12 national examination pass rates have declined from 18.5 percent to 0.2 percent, consistently falling below national averages. Survey data from 180 teachers reveal a significant disparity: urban principals demonstrate stronger instructional managing program, including supervising teaching, coordinating curriculum, and monitoring progress, compared to rural counterparts (p=.022). Critically, the expected relationship between principals' instructional leadership and teachers' classroom practices holds in urban schools (ρ=.337, p=.001) but disappears in rural schools (ρ=.160, p=.147), signaling systemic breakdown. Qualitative data from nine principals and 54 teachers across focus group reveal the mechanisms behind quantitative findings: rural principals face a triad of interconnected barriers, including overwhelming administrative burdens, severe resource scarcity, and a profoundly demoralized, unstable teaching force, which render conventional instructional leadership impossible. Confronted with these constraints, effective rural principals strategically redirect their energy toward promoting school climate through shared struggle, familial support, and symbolic community recognition. This contextually intelligent adaptation sustains teacher commitment where technical solutions fail. Findings demand fundamental policy reorientation: support systems must validate climate-focused leadership and dismantle structural barriers rather than imposing standardized blueprints ill-suited to rural realities.

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