- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The goal of this book is not just better leaders, but educational organizations that are entrepreneurial in nature. The author offers practical advice to educational leaders, from teachers to principals to superintendents, on practical steps toward a more innovative organization.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Jack LeonardInnovation in the Schoolhouse51,99 €
Jay Johnson MorrowReport of the Schoolhouse Commission Upon a General Plan for the Consolidation of Public Schools in the District of Columbia ..37,99 €
Mary-Ellen BoyleThe New Schoolhouse70,99 €
Peter DownsSchoolhouse Shams98,99 €
Peter DownsSchoolhouse Shams53,99 €
Nicholas D. YoungSounding the Alarm in the Schoolhouse40,99 €
John GrattoInside the Schoolhouse81,99 €-
-
-
The goal of this book is not just better leaders, but educational organizations that are entrepreneurial in nature. The author offers practical advice to educational leaders, from teachers to principals to superintendents, on practical steps toward a more innovative organization.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: R&L Education
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 445g
- ISBN-13: 9781475802894
- ISBN-10: 1475802897
- Artikelnr.: 38479222
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: R&L Education
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 445g
- ISBN-13: 9781475802894
- ISBN-10: 1475802897
- Artikelnr.: 38479222
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Jack Leonard
Preface
Introduction
Acknowledgments
Chapter One: The Case for Entrepreneurial Leadership in Education
Entrepreneurial Leaders: Risky but Required
Why All the Interest in Innovation?
What Does Innovation Mean?
What Is Entrepreneurial Leadership?
Entrepreneurial Leadership Traits
Entrepreneurial Behaviors
Why Aren't There More Entrepreneurial Leaders in Education?
The Place for Risk in Public Education
Conclusion
Chapter Two: Maximizing Entrepreneurial Leadership
Defining Economic Entrepreneurism
The Social Entrepreneur
Entrepreneurial Leadership Versus Other Leadership Theories
More Leadership Styles
Maximizing Entrepreneurship
A Case Study: the Early College Program
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Entrepreneurial Organizations
Leading for Innovation
Organizational Characteristics
Discretion
Professional Learning Communities
Proximity
Reorganization
Incentives
The Early College Case Study Reconsidered
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Leading an Entrepreneurial Organization
A Case Study: Dunbar High
Innovation in the 1980s
Scalability
What about the Principal?
Cultural Reform Strategy
Phase Two at Dunbar
Professional Development
Conclusion
Chapter 5: The Entrepreneurial Teacher Leader
What Is Teacher Leadership?
An Example of a Teacher Leader
A Case Study: Dunbar Again
A Different Kind of Teacher Leadership
A Historical Look
Economic and Social Definitions
How Teachers Perceive Teacher Leadership?
Strategies for Effective Entrepreneurial Communities of Practice
Principals Who Encourage Entrepreneurial Teacher Leadership
Parallel Leadership
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Partnerships for Entrepreneurial Innovation
The Power and Promise of Partnerships in Education
Caveats and Concerns
Two Theories
Multiple Partners: Exosystem Work
Cultural Cohesion
A Bad Example
Good Examples
Tight Coupling on a Larger Scale
Sustainability
Boundary Spanners
Benefits
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Entrepreneurial Leadership for Everyone
Measurements
Entrepreneurial Disruptions
Social Effects
Political Gains
Economics
The Creative World
Conclusion
Introduction
Acknowledgments
Chapter One: The Case for Entrepreneurial Leadership in Education
Entrepreneurial Leaders: Risky but Required
Why All the Interest in Innovation?
What Does Innovation Mean?
What Is Entrepreneurial Leadership?
Entrepreneurial Leadership Traits
Entrepreneurial Behaviors
Why Aren't There More Entrepreneurial Leaders in Education?
The Place for Risk in Public Education
Conclusion
Chapter Two: Maximizing Entrepreneurial Leadership
Defining Economic Entrepreneurism
The Social Entrepreneur
Entrepreneurial Leadership Versus Other Leadership Theories
More Leadership Styles
Maximizing Entrepreneurship
A Case Study: the Early College Program
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Entrepreneurial Organizations
Leading for Innovation
Organizational Characteristics
Discretion
Professional Learning Communities
Proximity
Reorganization
Incentives
The Early College Case Study Reconsidered
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Leading an Entrepreneurial Organization
A Case Study: Dunbar High
Innovation in the 1980s
Scalability
What about the Principal?
Cultural Reform Strategy
Phase Two at Dunbar
Professional Development
Conclusion
Chapter 5: The Entrepreneurial Teacher Leader
What Is Teacher Leadership?
An Example of a Teacher Leader
A Case Study: Dunbar Again
A Different Kind of Teacher Leadership
A Historical Look
Economic and Social Definitions
How Teachers Perceive Teacher Leadership?
Strategies for Effective Entrepreneurial Communities of Practice
Principals Who Encourage Entrepreneurial Teacher Leadership
Parallel Leadership
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Partnerships for Entrepreneurial Innovation
The Power and Promise of Partnerships in Education
Caveats and Concerns
Two Theories
Multiple Partners: Exosystem Work
Cultural Cohesion
A Bad Example
Good Examples
Tight Coupling on a Larger Scale
Sustainability
Boundary Spanners
Benefits
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Entrepreneurial Leadership for Everyone
Measurements
Entrepreneurial Disruptions
Social Effects
Political Gains
Economics
The Creative World
Conclusion
Preface
Introduction
Acknowledgments
Chapter One: The Case for Entrepreneurial Leadership in Education
Entrepreneurial Leaders: Risky but Required
Why All the Interest in Innovation?
What Does Innovation Mean?
What Is Entrepreneurial Leadership?
Entrepreneurial Leadership Traits
Entrepreneurial Behaviors
Why Aren't There More Entrepreneurial Leaders in Education?
The Place for Risk in Public Education
Conclusion
Chapter Two: Maximizing Entrepreneurial Leadership
Defining Economic Entrepreneurism
The Social Entrepreneur
Entrepreneurial Leadership Versus Other Leadership Theories
More Leadership Styles
Maximizing Entrepreneurship
A Case Study: the Early College Program
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Entrepreneurial Organizations
Leading for Innovation
Organizational Characteristics
Discretion
Professional Learning Communities
Proximity
Reorganization
Incentives
The Early College Case Study Reconsidered
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Leading an Entrepreneurial Organization
A Case Study: Dunbar High
Innovation in the 1980s
Scalability
What about the Principal?
Cultural Reform Strategy
Phase Two at Dunbar
Professional Development
Conclusion
Chapter 5: The Entrepreneurial Teacher Leader
What Is Teacher Leadership?
An Example of a Teacher Leader
A Case Study: Dunbar Again
A Different Kind of Teacher Leadership
A Historical Look
Economic and Social Definitions
How Teachers Perceive Teacher Leadership?
Strategies for Effective Entrepreneurial Communities of Practice
Principals Who Encourage Entrepreneurial Teacher Leadership
Parallel Leadership
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Partnerships for Entrepreneurial Innovation
The Power and Promise of Partnerships in Education
Caveats and Concerns
Two Theories
Multiple Partners: Exosystem Work
Cultural Cohesion
A Bad Example
Good Examples
Tight Coupling on a Larger Scale
Sustainability
Boundary Spanners
Benefits
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Entrepreneurial Leadership for Everyone
Measurements
Entrepreneurial Disruptions
Social Effects
Political Gains
Economics
The Creative World
Conclusion
Introduction
Acknowledgments
Chapter One: The Case for Entrepreneurial Leadership in Education
Entrepreneurial Leaders: Risky but Required
Why All the Interest in Innovation?
What Does Innovation Mean?
What Is Entrepreneurial Leadership?
Entrepreneurial Leadership Traits
Entrepreneurial Behaviors
Why Aren't There More Entrepreneurial Leaders in Education?
The Place for Risk in Public Education
Conclusion
Chapter Two: Maximizing Entrepreneurial Leadership
Defining Economic Entrepreneurism
The Social Entrepreneur
Entrepreneurial Leadership Versus Other Leadership Theories
More Leadership Styles
Maximizing Entrepreneurship
A Case Study: the Early College Program
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Entrepreneurial Organizations
Leading for Innovation
Organizational Characteristics
Discretion
Professional Learning Communities
Proximity
Reorganization
Incentives
The Early College Case Study Reconsidered
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Leading an Entrepreneurial Organization
A Case Study: Dunbar High
Innovation in the 1980s
Scalability
What about the Principal?
Cultural Reform Strategy
Phase Two at Dunbar
Professional Development
Conclusion
Chapter 5: The Entrepreneurial Teacher Leader
What Is Teacher Leadership?
An Example of a Teacher Leader
A Case Study: Dunbar Again
A Different Kind of Teacher Leadership
A Historical Look
Economic and Social Definitions
How Teachers Perceive Teacher Leadership?
Strategies for Effective Entrepreneurial Communities of Practice
Principals Who Encourage Entrepreneurial Teacher Leadership
Parallel Leadership
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Partnerships for Entrepreneurial Innovation
The Power and Promise of Partnerships in Education
Caveats and Concerns
Two Theories
Multiple Partners: Exosystem Work
Cultural Cohesion
A Bad Example
Good Examples
Tight Coupling on a Larger Scale
Sustainability
Boundary Spanners
Benefits
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Entrepreneurial Leadership for Everyone
Measurements
Entrepreneurial Disruptions
Social Effects
Political Gains
Economics
The Creative World
Conclusion







