Resolving Conflicts in

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Resolving Conflicts in T This author analyzes the objectives and some of the problems of supervision, and suggests that the building principal has a major responsibility in furnishing a continuing leadership in this area. HE TERM "supervision" has been used to cover a multitude of con ceptions. They tend to range all the way from the narrow notion that it is a technique by which individuals ob serve classroom practices and make judgments about them (snoopervision), to broad interpretations of "the improvement of instruction." Before one can resolve conflicts it is necessary to be clear as to where the conflicts lie. For purposes of this article, super vision is conceived as constituting four major areas of activity: 1. The observation of classroom practices for the purpose of giving the teacher observed some helpful guid ance in improving his instruction. (Classroom supervision) 2. The guidance of a group of teach ers in designing and constructing total sequences of learning experiences for children. (Curriculum planning) 3. The development of techniques and procedures for determining the success of individual teachers and of the total program. (Evaluation) Wilbur A. Yauch is professor of education and head, Department of Education, Northern Illinois State Teachers College, De Kalb, Illinois. 4. The improvement of ability to work harmoniously together for the good of the program and the welfare of the individual teacher. (Human re lations) The above merely identify the areas in which supervisors work. They do not necessarily reveal the conflicts which arc likely to occur in one's effort to contribute to the improvement of instruction. In order to be explicit about these conflict areas, the follow ing arc deliberately isolated. There are probably many others than those listed, but in the experience of the writer these tend to be the most critical. 1. Who shall plan the basic sequence of learning? Answers to this question range from the teacher, the principal, the supervisor, the curriculum special ist to committees of teachers or all the teachers collectively. The conflict needs to be resolved by determining the location of authority in which the responsibility for the curriculum rests. 2. Who makes the judgments con cerning the quality of teaching results? Typically, administrators and super visors have assumed this responsibility, but there arc many who question the validity of this assumption. They claim that evaluation is an integral part of

the whole planning process and must be exercised by those who do the plan ning. Conflicts 1 and 2 must be re solved together. 3. Who shall engage in the activi ties of supervision? Traditionally, su pervision has been the sole responsi bility of a person designated by the title "supervisor," whether "special" or "general." Recently, there has been some inclination to think of the build ing principal as involved in the process. More advanced theory has suggested that supervision is a group function, to be engaged in by all who are affected. Unless the efforts to find adequate resolution of these problem areas are to degenerate into a pitched battle for supremacy of the fittest, it is necessary to establish some agreeable frame of reference that will provide a total con text into which the answers will congruently fit. For the purpose of stimu lating discussion, the following analysis is proposed. There is no question about the in itial and ultimate responsibility for educational programs. It rests legally with the state. In many states this re sponsibility is delegated to the local community, with certain powers re served by the state. The local board of education, through its superintendent, establishes the basic authority for edu cation in the community it serves. Up to this point there is no problem, since the "line of authority" is clearly de lineated. But, within the local school district itself there is no legal mandate that dec/ees that educational authority shall remain with the superintendent. I Ic may, upon approval of the board of education, further delegate his respon sibility for the educational program. In practice, he has usually done so through the employment of central office super visors who attempt to coordinate the entire program under his direction. The question is seldom raised as to whether or not the superintendent has the au thority to delegate some of his responsi bilities, but there is reason to question the effectiveness of that delegation. Since the administrative affairs of the school system are generally dele gated directly to the building principal, it is suggested that the entire responsi bility for the educational program be come the province of the building ad ministrator. Thus, the principal, in fact, becomes the direct subordinate of the superintendent in all educa tional matters, including the improve ment of instruction. The principal, in turn, has the choice of arrogating to himself all decisions which govern the school program, or further delegating those that deal di rectly with the curriculum and its im provement to the teaching staff as a whole. In the latter case, the authority for the school's program then becomes the responsibility of the entire staff, with the principal acting as executive and educational leader. All basic policies which govern the program of the individual school will be made cooperatively by the teachers, includ ing such matters as the conflict areas listed above. Essentially, the proposal frankly suggests that the basic policy-making body for educational programs be the individual school, and not the school system. Each school would construct

its plans in terms of the uniqueness of its educational context. Schools within the same system might conceivably have similar programs, or vary widely in terms of what was demanded by the conditions. Unification would be sought at the system-wide level of planning of principals under the guid ance of the superintendent. This proposal obviously places a heavy load of educational responsibili ties on the competence of the indi vidual principal. He must be able to conceive his role as that of educational leader rather than that of manager of administrative detail. His purely ad ministrative chores would need to be delegated to a clerk or secretary so that he might be free to provide the staff with a maximum of inspired profes sional leadership. If this proposal is to prove its valid ity, it must be tested in its ability to resolve the conflicts which now beset the problem of improving instruction. The following is an attempt to make such a test. 1. Who shall plan the basic sequence of learning? This question is now an swered by the delegation of responsi bility to the entire staff. The program of learning which will be followed by all members of the staff is determined cooperatively. It will be necessary for the teachers to plan broadly in terms of at least four major areas: The basic patterns of development of children, including their learn ing patterns The social and cultural trends of American civilization The unique needs of the community the school attempts to serve The unique needs of the children that are revealed by a study of the community. From these rich resources of infor mation and understanding, the teach ers will then construct a basic design for the learning experiences of the boys and girls in a known community. This will become the authority from which the individual teacher draws for the development of his classroom pro gram. 2. Who makes the judgments con cerning the quality of teaching results? Since evaluation has at least two aspects, individual judgments and group appraisal, it is apparent that it must be exercised by many different people. The entire staff can construct devices and instruments for the collec tion of information about the success of the program, but individuals will need to make value judgments about the efficacy of any one teacher. It is suggested that the principal, the super visor and the individual teacher con cerned, work cooperatively within the framework of the decisions of the group so that the teacher is aided in making increasingly more valid judgments of his own work. In the last analysis, ef fective evaluation that leads to im provement is the product of the indi vidual's ability to see his work in the light of group standards he has helped to construct. 3. Who shall engage in the activi ties of supervision? This question is obviously answered by saying that all those concerned should participate. The principal has the direct responsi bility of working closely with the indi- 267

vidual teacher in helping to interpret group plans more effectively. The principal will need to have an intimate understanding of the teacher's work, which can be gained in a great variety of ways other than classroom observa tion, so that he is capable of providing leadership in the specific interpreta tion of the total program as it applies to the individual teacher. The general or special supervisor has an equally di rect responsibility, provided the super visor has been a member of the edu cational team which originally formu lated the plans which guide the work of the teacher. Other teachers have a considerable investment in the success achieved by all teachers. The total pro gram will stand or fall on the ability of each teacher to implement group plans adequately. Since all members of the planning group have a deep concern for the work of all, everyone on the team constitutes himself as a super visor, thus eliminating the conflict. There are many who will seriously question the present professional ade quacy of building principals to meas ure up to the high standards which are implied in the above suggestions. The proposal is not made without a clear recognition of the obstacles involved. But the alternative is equally objection able. Schools have been operating too long on the principle of expediency. Since present principals are incapable, so this theory goes, we must supply teachers with expertly trained special ists who will practically fill the gap. The net result has been the introduc tion of conflicting forces which strike at the heart of the cooperative process, and lead inexorably to the organization of schools on the principle of autocratic domination from above. Democratic leadership of a school program depends on the creation of a primary group which can plan coopera tively and accept the responsibility for its own acts. This group must have direct and continuous leadership which will help it to make plans skilfully, help it execute its plans in individual classroom programs, and assist it in en gaging in valid evaluations of its suc cesses and failures. It is difficult to con ceive of this leadership as less than an intimate, colleague relationship. There arc many problems incident to the application of this theory to the improvement of classroom instruction which are necessarily ignored. The writer can only be excused on the grounds of space limitations. If the reader is interested in an expansion and in more detailed application of the theory to practical school situations, let him consult the following: Wilbur A. Yauch, I mproving Human Relations in School Ad ministration. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1949. Harold G. Shane and Wilbur A. Yauch, Creative School Adminis tration. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1954. 268

Copyright 1955 by the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. All rights reserved.