Six Pivot Points in the Evolution of Instructional Leadership Research and Practice, 1960–2025
Issued Date
2026-01-01
Resource Type
ISSN
08264805
eISSN
15731790
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105030970021
Journal Title
Interchange
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Interchange (2026)
Suggested Citation
Hallinger P. Six Pivot Points in the Evolution of Instructional Leadership Research and Practice, 1960–2025. Interchange (2026). doi:10.1007/s10780-026-09556-7 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/115472
Title
Six Pivot Points in the Evolution of Instructional Leadership Research and Practice, 1960–2025
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Author's Affiliation
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Abstract
Over the past six decades, instructional leadership has evolved from a marginal scholarly concern into a central pillar of educational leadership and management research and practice. Although now widely accepted as a core responsibility of school leaders, its conceptual development has been neither linear nor uncontested. This article offers a personal, historically grounded reflection on the evolution of instructional leadership in both research and practice. The analysis traces this trajectory through six critical “pivot points,” each catalyzed by shifts in theory, empirical evidence, or the policy environment of schooling. These include Cuban’s (1988) challenge to the feasibility of instructional leadership, the influence of major research syntheses (e.g., Hallinger & Heck, 1996; Robinson et al., 2008), the rise of competing leadership models such as transformational and distributed leadership, and recent efforts to connect instructional leadership enactment to its organizational and social context. Unlike the field-level transformation from “educational administration” to “educational leadership,” these pivot points reflect incremental yet consequential shifts in how instructional leadership has been conceptualized, studied, and enacted. The article concludes by examining the implications of how these tensions have been addressed and by identifying promising directions for future research.
