A study of the relationships between organizational structure of Newfoundland schools and effectiveness as perceived by classroom teachers

This study was conducted to investigate structural patterns within Newfoundland schools, and to determine possible relationships between organizational structure and perceived organizational effectiveness. Structure, viewed as a means to desired goals, was conceived of in terms of orientation to Web...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wheeler, Dudley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/9928/
https://research.library.mun.ca/9928/1/Wheeler_Dudley.pdf
Description
Summary:This study was conducted to investigate structural patterns within Newfoundland schools, and to determine possible relationships between organizational structure and perceived organizational effectiveness. Structure, viewed as a means to desired goals, was conceived of in terms of orientation to Weberian bureaucratic principles and/or to selected professional dimensions. Effectiveness variables, as the dependent variables, were measured through classroom teachers' perceptions of quality of teaching, teacher ability to cope with change, and the absence of strain and conflict within schools. Altogether, nine sets of hypotheses were posited about the relationships among these independent and dependent variables. -- Data were collected during May and June, 1982, from a sample of 200 randomly selected schools from around the province. One classroom teacher in each school was asked to complete a three part questionnaire. A total of 166 teachers (83 percent) responded in time to be included in the analyses. -- All hypotheses for the study were tested through Pearson product-moment correlations. To further analyse different sources of variance for the dependent variables, a series of multiple regression analyses were computed. In addition, to determine the relative effectiveness of various structural combinations, a two-way analysis of variance was computed for each effectiveness variable. -- The study revealed that Newfoundland classroom teachers perceived schools as moderately oriented to professionalism while remaining somewhat bureaucratic. All statistically significant relationships between professionalism and bureaucracy, however, were negative, indicating these may be non-complementary phenomena. In addition, relatively small negative relationships between bureaucracy and teacher orientation to students could indicate many teachers have not formed a strong commitment to service to clients. -- While the relationships between school level bureaucracy and effectiveness were negative in most cases, they did not ...