Citation
Britten, Linton @ Jerah
(2003)
Psychological Empowerment of Secondary School Principals in Sarawak.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
This study is an attempt to assess the level of, and the factors
associated with, psychological empowerment of secondary school
principals in Sarawak. Two groups of respondents were involved in
the study: the school principals, and classroom teachers of the
selected school principals' schools. The target population comprised
131 secondary school principals. Self-administered questionnaires
were sent to 117 randomly selected school principals, of which 101
were subsequently used in data analyses. From the 585 sets of self-administered
questionnaires sent to the teachers, 458 were useable
for data analyses. Five different attitudinal rating scales (or instruments), grouped in two
different sets, were used in the study. All the rating scales had
reliability estimates (Cronbach's Coefficient Alpha) of above .70.
Overall, the degree of felt psychological empowerment as reported by
the school principals was mostly at moderate or higher level. There
were however, variations across the four PE dimensions. In a
nutshell, the levels of empowerment experienced by the sample
during the study were found to be generally moderate or higher.
Only variables that were more directly related in a personal nature to
the school principals indicated some significant relationship with
scores on the psychological empowerment concept, either at the
composite or dimension levels. As expected, scores on the work
motivation, and the withdrawal intentions, showed significant
relationship with total scores on PE.
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