Recent work suggests that viewing school leadership from a distributed perspective has the potential to provide useful insight into how management and leadership unfold in the daily lives of schools. Writing in the area of distributed leadership has identified numerous entities in the school across which leadership can be distributed, including people and aspects of the situation such as routines and tools (Harris, 2005; MacBeath et al., 2004; Spillane, 2006). While there have been advances in articulating conceptual frameworks for taking a distributed perspective on school leadership and management (Gronn, 2000; Spillane et al., 2004), the empirical research base in this area is less developed. With a few exceptions (Camburn et al., 2003; Leithwood et al., 2007; Spillane et al., 2007), most empirical work has involved small samples of schools. But as we argue in this chapter, before researchers begin to accumulate evidence on distributed leadership in schools, an important intermediate step needs to be taken: the operationalization of concepts, or in other words, the translation of theory into measurement. It is this intermediate step that is the primary focus of this paper.
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Spillane, J.P., Camburn, E.M., Pustejovsky, J., Pareja, A.S., Lewis, G. (2009). Taking a Distributed Perspective in Studying School Leadership and Management: The Challenge of Study Operations. In: Harris, A. (eds) Distributed Leadership. Studies in Educational Leadership, vol 7. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9737-9_4
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