Principal Retention Patterns in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah
Description
With some recent national data suggesting an increase in the percentage of principals departing K–12 schools and with school systems facing an unprecedented public health crisis due to COVID-19, principal retention is a key area of concern for many local and state education agencies.
The Regional Educational Laboratory West (REL West) undertook this study of principal retention rates to help leaders in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah better understand principal retention patterns in their state, so that their new statewide leadership support initiatives could identify areas where support could be most effective.
Key Findings:
- Fewer than half of principals in each of these states remained at the same school from fall 2016 to fall 2020 (four-year retention).
- Principals who changed jobs (but remained in the principalship) tended to move to a new school in the same local education agency rather than to a new school in another local education agency.
- Principal retention patterns varied by state according to grade span, school locale type, and student demographic characteristics.
- Fewer principals remained at schools with lower average proficiency rates on standardized tests in math and English language arts than at schools with higher average proficiency rates from fall 2016 to fall 2019 (three-year retention).
Resource Details
Product Information
Copyright: 2021Format: PDF
Pages: 12
Publisher: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences
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