Any Country
Radio Filter Country
Search School
Schools / Brands
Any Curriculum
Checkboxes Filter Curriculum
Any Country
Radio Filter Country
Search for school
Schools / Brands
Any Curriculum
Checkboxes Filter Curriculum

The Power of Leadership in School Growth and Team Collaboration

Reading Time: 7 minutes

Table of Contents

Key Takeaways

  • Effective school leadership is directly linked to improved student outcomes and a positive school culture.

  • Transformational leadership in schools builds teacher motivation, shared vision, and student engagement.

  • Research across four American schools in the UAE found that 89% of stakeholders believe strong leadership correlates with better school performance.

  • Leadership strategies in education must be adaptive, empathetic, and vision-driven to be truly effective.

  • Ongoing professional development for school leaders is essential to sustaining growth.


Think about the best school you have ever seen or heard of. Now ask yourself: what made it stand out?

Chances are, it was the people leading it.

The concept of leadership in education goes beyond administration or policy compliance. It is about building environments where teachers thrive, students grow, and communities trust the institution they belong to. When leadership works well, everything else tends to follow.

This blog draws on a published research paper examining leadership practices across four American schools in Sharjah, UAE. The findings offer clear, evidence-backed insights into how great school leaders shape culture, fuel collaboration, and drive lasting growth.


What Does the Concept of Leadership in Education Really Look Like in Schools Today?

The concept of leadership in education is deceptively simple to name but complex to practise. Educational leadership goes well beyond managing timetables or budgets. It is about inspiring people, nurturing talent, and steering a shared vision.

As one of our educational thinkers put it: "You cannot manage men into battle. You manage things; you lead people." That distinction matters enormously in schools, where every decision a leader makes ripples outward to classrooms, playgrounds, and homes.

At Global Schools Group, we see this truth lived out across our network every day. Leadership in educational management determines whether a school is merely functional or genuinely exceptional.

Why it matters: Research consistently shows that leadership quality is directly associated with higher student achievement, stronger teacher motivation, and healthier school cultures.

What Stakeholders Say About School Leadership

Clear goal-setting improves student performance

70% agreed or strongly agreed

Adequate support and resources for teachers

76% agreed or strongly agreed

Positive school culture encourages engagement

82% agreed or strongly agreed

Professional development improves teaching quality

76% agreed or strongly agreed

Leadership promotes staff collaboration

73% agreed or strongly agreed

Effective leadership correlates with performance

89% agreed or strongly agreed

Source: Research study across four American schools in Sharjah, UAE (2024)

Why Do the Most Effective Leadership Styles in Education Reject a One-Size-Fits-All Approach?

Leadership styles in education are not one-size-fits-all. The most effective school leaders adapt their approach depending on the situation, the team, and the needs of the moment.

The research study identified a strong commitment to situational leadership among high-performing school leaders. These leaders did not rely on a fixed style. They shifted between being directive and collaborative based on what each context demanded.

What does this look like in practice?

  • During strategic planning, leaders were structured and goal-focused.

  • In one-on-one conversations with teachers, they were empathetic and supportive.

  • At community events, they were open, approachable, and relationship-driven.

This kind of adaptive leadership is exactly what builds a school culture that people believe in. When teachers feel genuinely supported and students feel seen, the school becomes a place where learning is a shared purpose.

Curious about how GSG's approach to education reflects these same values? Explore our philosophy to see how leadership and learning intersect across our network.

How Does Transformational Leadership in Schools Separate Good Institutions From Great Ones?

Transformational leadership in schools is one of the most researched and respected models in education today. And for good reason.

Transformational leaders inspire through vision. They encourage personal and collective growth. They make teachers feel that their work carries real meaning, and they make students feel that their potential is unlimited.

The importance of transformational leadership in school becomes especially clear when looking at outcomes. Studies by Robinson, Lloyd, and Rowe found that leadership quality is directly associated with higher student achievement, particularly when leaders prioritise instructional quality and staff collaboration.

Key traits of transformational school leaders include:

  • A compelling, clearly communicated vision for the school

  • Emotional intelligence: empathy, self-awareness, and social awareness

  • A deep commitment to teacher development and professional growth

  • The ability to turn change into opportunity rather than disruption

The UAE-based research observed that effective leaders viewed change as a pathway to growth. Rather than managing resistance, they brought their teams along by showing how new directions aligned with shared goals.

Traits of Effective School Leaders

Essential Leadership Characteristics (Observed in UAE Schools)

Maturity & Stability

Handles challenges with composure; maintains morale and trust

Vision & Conviction

Sets clear long-term direction; communicates with purpose

Strategic Planning

Aligns resources and actions with institutional goals

Emotional Intelligence

Demonstrates empathy, social awareness, and resilience

Adaptability

Adjusts leadership style to context and team needs

Collaborative Spirit

Actively promotes teamwork and knowledge-sharing

Source: Observational study across four American schools in Sharjah, UAE (2024)

How Does Leadership in Educational Management Turn Teachers Into Collaborative Teams?

One of the most consistent findings from the research was this: great leaders make collaboration a structural priority, not an afterthought.

Across the four schools studied, leadership teams held regular meetings involving principals, vice principals, assistant principals, and various departments. These were not routine catch-ups. They were strategic sessions for reviewing progress, addressing challenges, and aligning on institutional targets.

The result? 73% of surveyed stakeholders agreed that leadership actively promotes staff collaboration, contributing to improved educational outcomes.

What collaboration-focused leadership looks like:

  • Regular cross-departmental meetings that are action-oriented, not just informational

  • Transparent decision-making that invites input from teachers and staff

  • Distributed leadership models where responsibility is shared, not siloed

  • Mentorship and peer learning built into the professional culture

At GSG, this kind of collaborative culture is reflected in initiatives like our Global Annual Leadership Summit, where leaders from across the network come together to share ideas and drive our collective vision forward.

What Is the Real Impact of School Leadership on Student Achievement and Engagement?

This is perhaps the most important question in all of educational leadership. The impact of school leadership on student achievement is well-documented, but the research adds a particularly grounded perspective.

82% of respondents in the study agreed or strongly agreed that leadership fosters a positive school culture that encourages student engagement, with only 8% disagreeing. That is a remarkably strong signal.

The data tell a clear story:

  • Schools where leaders set clear, measurable goals saw stronger academic focus and direction.

  • Schools where teachers felt adequately supported produced better classroom outcomes.

  • Schools where leaders addressed diverse student needs saw more inclusive learning environments.

  • Schools with strong professional development programmes saw continuous improvement in teaching quality.

In short: when leadership prioritises people, students benefit.

This is why at GSG, our Academic Leadership Team comprises experienced educators who understand that student success starts at the top.

Which Leadership Strategies Actually Move the Needle in Schools?

Leadership strategies in education cover a wide range of approaches. The research narrows these down to the ones that consistently produce results.

Strategies backed by the research:

  1. Goal-Setting with Clarity: 70% of stakeholders agreed that clear goal-setting contributed to improved student performance. Goals must be measurable, communicated, and revisited regularly.

  2. Resourcing Teachers Adequately: 76% of respondents felt that leadership provides adequate support and resources. Underpowered teachers cannot deliver outstanding learning experiences.

  3. Structured Leader Selection: The schools studied used a systematic process including CV review, interviews, and a three-month trial period. This yielded leaders who were both professionally equipped and culturally aligned.

  4. Physical Environment as a Leadership Priority: Leadership teams placed high emphasis on school facilities. The physical environment directly shapes engagement, comfort, and learning quality.

  5. Stakeholder Responsiveness: 71% of stakeholders agreed that leadership responds meaningfully to feedback. Responsive leaders build trust, and trust drives performance.

Which Leadership Strategies in Education Actually Improve School Performance?

The research puts forward a set of recommendations that are highly applicable across international school contexts. These are not aspirational ideals. They are practical, evidence-grounded steps.

  • Invest in professional development: Leadership training must be ongoing, covering both technical skills like strategic planning and interpersonal skills like empathy and cultural awareness.

  • Build mentorship pathways: Pairing experienced leaders with emerging ones accelerates knowledge transfer and builds a pipeline of capable school leaders.

  • Widen stakeholder involvement: Involving teachers, parents, and students in leadership decisions increases buy-in and generates better outcomes.

  • Prioritise diversity and inclusion: As schools serve increasingly multicultural communities, leaders must be equipped to champion inclusive learning for all students.

  • Promote research-informed practice: Schools that ground their leadership approaches in evidence and peer-reviewed research are better positioned to adapt and improve.

At GSG, our commitment to continuous improvement is reflected in our student wellbeing and inclusive learning initiatives, which connect leadership practice directly to student outcomes.

Leadership Actions and Their Impact

Leadership Actions and Their Measurable Impact (UAE School Study, 2024)

Clear goal-setting

70% of stakeholders reported improved student performance focus

Teacher support and resources

76% felt better equipped for classroom effectiveness

Positive school culture

82% noted stronger student engagement

Professional development

76% saw improvement in teaching quality

Staff collaboration

73% reported stronger educational outcomes

Stakeholder responsiveness

71% said school practices improved as a result

Overall leadership-performance link

89% believe strong leadership drives school performance

Source: Survey of teachers, administrative staff, parents, and students across four American schools in Sharjah, UAE (2024)

 

“Leadership characteristics of a school are important factors in promoting systems and structures that enable the school to operate as a learning organisation.”

Silins & Mulford, 2015

 

FAQ's

How do leadership styles in education affect student outcomes?

Different leadership styles in education produce different outcomes. Transformational leadership tends to produce the strongest results, particularly for student engagement and teacher motivation. Research shows that leaders who adapt their style situationally, combining vision-setting with personalised support, consistently outperform those who use a fixed approach.

The concept of leadership in education refers to the practice of guiding a school community towards shared academic and developmental goals. It goes well beyond administration, encompassing culture-building, teacher development, and strategic vision.

High academic outcomes depend on leaders who set clear goals, provide teachers with adequate resources, and build a culture of excellence. Global Indian International School (GIIS), with campuses across Singapore, Japan, the UAE, Malaysia, and India, is built on exactly this model. GIIS leaders align curriculum quality, teacher development, and student ambition to consistently produce graduates admitted to the world’s top universities.

Inclusive leadership means every student, regardless of background, learning style, or nationality, feels seen, supported, and challenged. One World International School (OWIS) is designed around this principle. With campuses in Singapore, India, and Saudi Arabia, OWIS leaders champion diversity, differentiated learning, and a culture of belonging that the research in this blog identifies as central to strong school performance.

Character, integrity, and a commitment to well-rounded development are hallmarks of the British educational tradition. Glendale International School Dubai brings these values to life in the UAE through the British National Curriculum. Its leaders prioritise not just academic outcomes but the personal growth of every student, reflecting the research finding that the most effective school leaders balance vision with deep human awareness.

Similar blogs that you might like