Do interns’ beliefs, assumptions, and perceptions about administrative positions in education change as a result of the internship experience? If changes occur, is the tone of these changes favorable or does the experience result in discouragement?
Student reactions to their internship experiences in educational leadership at this Midwestern public university are the catalyst for this study. This internship experience follows the completion of five prerequisite graduate level courses in educational leadership and is designed to immerse aspiring school administrators in leadership experiences under the tutelage of an onsite mentor and university supervisor.
The internship is two semesters in duration, part-time, and consists of six distinct projects that must demonstrate leadership. Three projects may be completed in the building to which the intern is currently assigned. Three projects must be completed at a building where the intern is not assigned and has a grade span different from the one in which the intern is currently working. All projects must be aligned with the Interstate School Leaders Consortium Standards for school leaders. Each project must focus on a specific standard although learning may encompass additional standards. Once the projects are developed and approved, students, through a monthly log, document a commitment to spending a minimum of five hours per week throughout the school year internship.
Leadership projects are designed by the intern in collaboration with the on-site mentor. Inherent in the design is the goal of demonstrating leadership by the intern and completing a project that advances the school improvement plan. Both the on-site mentor and the university supervisor must approve all projects. Documentation for evaluation includes the project plan, project artifacts, monthly journal, on-site mentor feedback, rubric-based self-assessment, and the completion of a reflective essay for each project.
The monthly journals provided the source of data for this study. Each journal must contain answers to four reflective questions. Responses to these questions have prompted ongoing dialogue among faculty and interns. It has served as a catalyst for questioning numerous assumptions about what constitutes legitimate preparation for the internship experience and ultimately a readiness for the first administrative role.
This study is a descriptive content analysis with a stated goal of discovering more information about the impact of the internship experience on the intern by analyzing intern responses to one specific question: How have your assumptions and beliefs about school administration changed as a result of this month’s internship experiences?
To examine the potential for changing beliefs and assumptions, the researchers designed an exploratory study to determine what themes would emerge from interns’ journals. During the 2009-2010 academic year 126 graduate students participated in building-level internships during the fall semester and 111 students completed internships during the spring semester. Although students served their internships primarily in schools throughout Indiana, several from sites in Ohio, Illinois, South Carolina, and Florida were included in the analysis. From this pool, the researchers used documentary and content analysis to extract general and unique themes from two sections (21 students) of archived journals to address these research questions:
- How do interns’ assumptions and beliefs change during their internship experiences?
- What themes emerge from the students’ voices as they begin the transition from their roles as teachers to building-level administrators?
Of the 21 students represented in this initial study, 14 were male and seven were female. These candidates served their internship in eight urban school sites, nine suburban sites, and four rural school sites (one which represented a private school). Interns completed six monthly journals during the two semesters of their internship. The researchers analyzed content from the journals for each of the 21 subjects, analyzing the interns’ responses to the reflective questions at the end of each journal. Later studies will address other aspects of the interns’ journals, but this study primarily focused on the first open-ended journal question: How have your assumptions and beliefs been changed?
During the internship orientation, supervisors framed journal assignments so as to promote open and honest communication. Faculty informed interns that their journals might be used for research purposes, but only in a way that completely de-identified the data. Broad grading criteria for interns’ journals support “stream-of-consciousness-type entries” and, for example, do not reflect grammar or typographical errors, which are important criteria for other assignments.
Interns’ written responses were analyzed using QSR NVivo7 software. The content analysis entailed a clear set of rules for each node, supported when possible by the literature review. Text was coded at selected nodes. After common themes were identified, the researchers further delineated subthemes from the predominant themes.
Past evidence, from student program satisfaction surveys and the general success of program graduates to secure administrative positions, led the researchers to expect a more positive tone as they analyzed interns’ journals. Therefore, the focus for this initial research report shifted more towards the strong negative tone of interns’ journal narrative. The analysis of text units revealed 53% to 57% of the major themes were coded as negative tone; whereas, those text units comparatively coded as positive were 43% to 47%. Through the negative tone of interns’ voices, principal interns illuminated their changing assumptions with greater clarity.