Schweinberger, Kirsten

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Schweinberger
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Kirsten
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Schweinberger, Kirsten

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Gerade angezeigt 1 - 2 von 2
  • Publikation
    When one wants more than the other. Multi-professional cooperation between staff in extended education and teachers
    (Barbara Budrich, 2023) Näpfli, Jasmin; Schweinberger, Kirsten [in: IJREE – International Journal for Research on Extended Education]
    In 2021 the Swiss Teachers’ Association (LCH) demanded that extended education offerings (EEO) should be the responsibility of schools and not outsourced, which in turn also implies a new cooperation partner for the schools. Till today not much is known about this cooperation. This study investigates this cooperation from the perspective of the cooperation partners – the teachers (N=233), school leaders (N=64), staff (N=349) and leaders (N=67) of the EEO by means of a quantitative survey in a pioneering canton in Switzerland. The findings show that cooperation is rated as “good”—but for different reasons—by the cooperation partners and that cooperation is linked to job satisfaction.
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
  • Publikation
    Responses to positive and negative feedback on organizational aspects of school quality. Teachers’ and leaders’ views on a Swiss traffic light approach to school inspection
    (Routledge, 2020) Quesel, Carsten; Schweinberger, Kirsten; Möser, Guido [in: School Effectiveness and School Improvement]
    In social contexts, feedback by observers, participants, or recipients provides information on performance and products, thereby creating an opportunity to learn and improve. In education governance, many countries rely on school inspection by professional observers to convey feedback on organizational and pedagogical processes and outcomes. This article examines the reactions of teachers and leaders to a Swiss inspection approach that uses a traffic light system to evaluate process features of school quality. Using SPSS and Mplus, the multilevel analysis distinguishes between individual and collective effects. On the individual level, school leaders respond to the traffic light inspections in general slightly more positively than teachers. On the collective level, feedback that flags organizational disturbances or failures of local schools does not evoke a sweeping rejection. Overall, the results indicate a rather high acceptance of the traffic light approach.
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift