Authors :
Courtney Heatherton Blackledge
Volume/Issue :
Volume 11 - 2026, Issue 1 - January
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/waw43u8v
Scribd :
https://tinyurl.com/y3ta283x
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/26jan341
Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.
Abstract :
In the context of a leadership preparation program in K-12 education, this article explores aligned theories and
practices of leadership that reflect the professional experiences and aspirations of black females who serve as school
principals, with a focus on organizational results and equity-oriented improvement in schools. Analyzing a qualitative
synthesis of practitioner stories and theory, the study integrates transformational, transactional, culturally responsive
leadership analysis, and intersectionality of role expectations. The results suggest that the transformational model of
leadership, combined with culturally responsive and evidence-based decision-making routines and distributed approaches,
promote instructional coherence, staff capacity-building, and sustained trust among stakeholders. The discussion explores
persistent challenges such as stereotype threat, inequitable emotional labor, and policy limitations, and traces repeatable
practices that these leaders employ to mitigate stressors through transparent communications, data-informed coaching, and
focus on time-bound collaboration. Implications include the need for leadership preparation programs to incorporate race-
and gender-conscious practices into the development of aligned theories; the need to evolve district policy to underwrite
initiatives that address specific school contexts; and the need to design professional development that enacts embedded
networks of mentorship and cycles of reflection, with recommendations that include staged implementation templates and
rubrics for evaluation and adjustment.
Keywords :
Culturally Responsive Leadership; Distributed Leadership; Inclusive Education; Intersectionality; Transactional Leadership; Transformational Leadership.
References :
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In the context of a leadership preparation program in K-12 education, this article explores aligned theories and
practices of leadership that reflect the professional experiences and aspirations of black females who serve as school
principals, with a focus on organizational results and equity-oriented improvement in schools. Analyzing a qualitative
synthesis of practitioner stories and theory, the study integrates transformational, transactional, culturally responsive
leadership analysis, and intersectionality of role expectations. The results suggest that the transformational model of
leadership, combined with culturally responsive and evidence-based decision-making routines and distributed approaches,
promote instructional coherence, staff capacity-building, and sustained trust among stakeholders. The discussion explores
persistent challenges such as stereotype threat, inequitable emotional labor, and policy limitations, and traces repeatable
practices that these leaders employ to mitigate stressors through transparent communications, data-informed coaching, and
focus on time-bound collaboration. Implications include the need for leadership preparation programs to incorporate race-
and gender-conscious practices into the development of aligned theories; the need to evolve district policy to underwrite
initiatives that address specific school contexts; and the need to design professional development that enacts embedded
networks of mentorship and cycles of reflection, with recommendations that include staged implementation templates and
rubrics for evaluation and adjustment.
Keywords :
Culturally Responsive Leadership; Distributed Leadership; Inclusive Education; Intersectionality; Transactional Leadership; Transformational Leadership.