How Headteachers can change their school climate
We want to know how headteachers can change their school climate, and what effect this has on teacher wellbeing. To gain this understanding, Teacher Support Network is sponsoring a major three-year research project, in collaboration with Birkbeck College, London, and the Economic, Social and Research Council.
You all know the feeling. You visit a school where you have applied to teach, and as you walk through the main door you are struck by the bright, welcoming posters in different languages and the helpful smile of the receptionist. Children are moving to their next lesson purposefully, and there is an atmosphere of focused energy.
The next day, you go for an interview in a second school. There is a barrier in the corridor leading up to the headteacher's room, a tired-looking staff photo on the wall, and a teacher rushes past shouting at the child who is struggling with the door. Within moments you have formed a distinct and hard-to-shake sense of what each school 'feels' like, and what it might be like to work there.
This phenomenon, sometimes known as 'school climate', may be more important than we realise.
The Project
To understand it better, Teacher Support Network is sponsoring a three-year research project, in collaboration with Birkbeck College, London, and the Economic, Social and Research Council. We want to know how headteachers can change their school climate, and what effect this has on teacher wellbeing.
The project includes a major study using online surveys in about 75 primary schools where the headteacher is leaving, and a new head starts in post in autumn 2012. If you know of any school which fits this profile, we would love to hear from you, because we need every school we can get!
Get Involved
To take part in the survey please contact Candy Whittome at: c.whittome@org-psych.bbk.ac.uk