Instructional leadership and self-efficacy of academic staff in public universities in Uganda
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Date
2024-08-30Author
Tiguryera, Scholastica
Mugizi, Wilson
Ssettumba, John Bosco
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This study examined the casual linkage between instructional leadership
and self-efficacy of academic staff in four public universities in Uganda.
Particularly, the study investigated the influence of instructional
supervision, curriculum coordination, profession development, and
monitoring students’ progress on self-efficacy of academic staff in
Ugandan public universities. The study was guided by the positivist
research philosophy hence used the quantitative approach employing the
correlational research design. Random sampling was adopted to obtain
the academic staff members who provided data through a selfadministered questionnaire. Partial least squares structural equation
modelling (PLS-SEM) results revealed that of the four instructional
leadership constructs, only curriculum coordination and monitoring
students’ progress influence teacher self-efficacy. Professional
development had a positive but insignificant influence, while instruction
supervision had a negative and insignificant influence on teaching selfefficacy of academic. The study concluded that curriculum coordination
and monitoring students’ progress are crucial for teacher self-efficacy
while professional development and instructional supervision have a
slight contribution. To foster teacher self-efficacy, instructional leaders
in universities should prioritize effective curriculum coordination and
monitoring of students' progress.