Leadership Under Pressure: Contextual Barriers and Capacity-Building Needs of School Heads in South Punjab
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52131/pjhss.2025.v13i2.2864Keywords:
Barriers, Capacity-Building, South PunjabAbstract
Effective school leadership is pivotal to improving educational quality, especially in resource-constrained and underserved regions like South Punjab. The study seeks to examine the leadership strengths, weaknesses, and systemic challenges encountered by head teachers in Southern Punjab, offering strategic recommendations for enhancing educational development in the region. This qualitative study employed a phenomenological research design, with data collected through semi-structured interviews conducted with 15 school leaders selected via purposive sampling. The data were analyzed with a thematic analysis method utilizing NVivo software. Findings revealed that, although school leaders possess essential leadership qualities, they commonly engage in the collaborative integration of vision and active participation in instructional planning to encourage joint team efforts. Insufficient autonomy, bureaucratic obstacles, and inadequate follow-up support post-training limit their effectiveness. QAED and the British Council are conducting leadership development projects; however, the training is centralized, generic, and lacks relevance to the specific contexts of local schools. Gender prejudices, contextual relevance, and inadequate monitoring hinder leadership effectiveness. It is recommended to use localized training, mentorship, and decentralized leadership frameworks to enhance school efficacy. However, longitudinal studies on the relationship between training and student performance in rural Pakistan are lacking.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Farhat Nasim, Sobia Idrees, Sidra Ashraf, Muhammad Moin

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.