Unit 5 Lesson 5
Unit 5 Lesson 5
Unit 5 Lesson 5
Introduction:
As stipulated in Chapter 1, Section 5, E of RA 9155, the school head is an
administrative and an instructional leader. Because the main function of school is
students’ learning, the school head must spend more time as an instructional leader.
As an instructional leader, he/she supervises instruction by observing teachers while
they teach, conducting post-observation conferences with individual teachers,
mentoring and coaching them, ensuring that teachers have the needed resources for
teaching. While physical improvement and fund sourcing—the concerns of
administrative leadership – help improve schools, the more concern is improvement
of instruction as this has a direct bearing on learning. More often than not, however,
school heads spend more time soliciting funds for a flagpole, a stage, a classroom,
path walk, waiting shed etc. leaving no time left for instructional supervision.
Learning Outcomes:
1. List down 2 things that the school head does as an instructional leader and 2
things as an administrative leader.
2. Based on your observations of school heads, with which role is the school
head more occupied? Prove your answer.
1. Based on your lists (in the Activity Phase of this lesson) how does an
administrative leader differ from an instructional leader?
Study Figure 2 side by side with the Table 7 on domains and strands. Notice that
there are competencies expected of school heads as instructional leaders and as
administrative leaders. Focused on instructional leadership are Domain 2, which is
instructional leadership itself and Domain 3, creating a student-centered learning climate
which is part of instructional leadership. Related to administrative leadership are Domain 1,
school leadership; Domain 6, school management and operations; and Domain 4, human
resource management and professional development; Domain 5, parent involvement and
community partnership. Domain 7, personal and professional attributes and interpersonal
effectiveness can relate to both instructional leadership and administrative leadership since
this has something to do a teacher’s person-hood which cannot detach from what a teacher
says and does.
As a member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), let’s also take a
look at the competencies of school heads for Southeast Asia.
Instructional Leadership
Like the NCBSSH for Philippines, the competency framework for Southeast Asian
school heads also include domains for instructional leadership and administrative leadership.
The domain on Instructional Leadership encompasses 4 competencies: 1) leading curriculum
implementation and improvement; 2) creating a learner-centered environment; 3) supervising
and evaluating teachers’ performance; and 4) delivering planned learning outcomes.
Administrative Leadership
This includes strategic thinking and innovation (Domain 1), stakeholders’ engagement
(Domain 4) and managerial leadership (Domain 5). For the enabling competencies for each
domain, refer to the Table above.
Like a refrain in a song, the idea that the school and community are partners in the
education of the child has been said repeatedly in this book. Rightly so, to be faithful to the
descriptive title of this course. The Teacher and the Community, School Culture and
Organizational Leadership. In fact, in this book, a separate Chapter was devoted to school
and community partnership to emphasize this significant role of teachers and school heads in
relation to communities. In the NCBSSH, several strands and indicators points to this school
and community partnership. The strand are as follows:
involves internal and external stakeholders in formulating and achieving school vision,
mission, goals and objectives (Domain 1 A)
2. What competencies for school heads are common to the NCBSSH and the
Southeast Asian Competencies for School Heads?
3. What is/are in the Southeast Asian Competencies for School Heads that is are
not in the NCBSSH?
4. What is/are in the NCBSSH that is/are not in the Southeast Asian
Competencies for School Heads?
With the word SCHOOL HEAD, give the competencies of a school head based
on the 2 competency frameworks for school heads you just studied.
S–
C–
H–
O–
O–
L–
H–
E–
A–
D–