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Table 3 provides a tentative outline of a superintendent management training structure. The scope of thetraining involves many more classroom hours and in field placements. The result will be more costs to students, districts,and states. However, the payoff would be in higher levels of superintendent job performance and in the long run, provide abetter school system.
Conclusion
Superintendent Management Program and Profile
At the conclusion of the university based courses and training provided by the state agency, each studentcould present a composite profile illustrating content learning, experiences, and demonstrated competencies attested to by stateagency tests, university based tests and assessment and feedback from district superintendents. This broad based assessment shouldbe sufficient to convince school boards and communities that a superintendent is competent to manage district fiscal and physicalresources.
Fortunately, most of the management training needed by superintendents is assessable, as there is a right wayand a wrong way to perform a task. In brief, it is a measurable type of training at the pre-service and in-service level.
The principal challenge for a state to develop and implement a superintendent management training programwill be to:
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