It's not very often that my little group of researchers on educational leadership preparation makes the news, so when they do, I want to point it out. Ed Fuller, who works for UCEA at the University of Texas, is quoted in an article in the Austin-American Statesman, and his research on principal movement out of the profession is presented in the article. Here is a bit of the article:
School districts nationwide are finding it harder to hold on to
principals as standards get tougher and the list of demands from the
state and federal governments gets longer.
Statewide, high turnover is particularly apparent in high schools.
About 61 percent of high school principals leave their schools or the
field within three years; by the fifth year, that figure increases to
76 percent. Austin's turnover rates are slightly higher: 64 percent
after three years and 82 percent after five years.
The district's annual high school principal turnover rate
is just over 25 percent, a figure that is on par with other urban
districts, where yearly turnover tends to average 18 percent to 25
percent.
When the principalship is a revolving door at a school, experts say,
it trickles down to teacher retention efforts and school reform
initiatives, which have vast implications for a district like Austin,
where the 11 traditional high schools are in various stages of reform,
with middle schools soon to follow. Local changes have included
redesigning high schools to resemble colleges.
More pressure
The accountability system has changed expectations.
"While principals put stress on teachers to improve outcomes,
teachers often do not lose their jobs over low accountability ratings,"
said Fuller, who has analyzed cumulative state turnover rates.
"Principals do."