A Pathway to Collective Efficacy: Achievement Goal Orientation?

Date of Award

2025

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Organization Development & Change (D.O.D.C.)

Department

Organization Development

First Advisor

David Park (Committee Chair)

Second Advisor

Truitt Gray (Committee Member)

Third Advisor

Margaret Brooks (Committee Member)

Fourth Advisor

Gajjala Radhika (Other)

Abstract

Education remains a fundamental right, yet persistent inequities, particularly along socioeconomic lines and race, highlight the urgent need for sustainable, research-driven solutions. Collective teacher efficacy (CTE), defined as a faculty’s shared belief in their collective capability to influence student outcomes positively, has emerged as a powerful lever for closing opportunity gaps. While research has established CTE’s link to student achievement, gaps remain in understanding the enabling conditions, specifically the role of school climate and collective achievement goal orientations. This quantitative study investigates how leaders’ trait goal orientations relate to collective achievement goal orientations and, in turn, how these orientations shape collective teacher efficacy. Using Vandewalle’s Achievement Goal Orientation scale and a revised version of Goddard’s Collective Teacher Efficacy – Short Form, this study surveyed 32 principals and 108 teachers nested within 20 school units, averaging four teachers per campus. Correlation and hierarchical regression analyses revealed a significant positive relationship between learning goal orientation climates and high levels of collective teacher efficacy. This supports the idea that climates centered on mastery, growth, and resilience strengthen collective beliefs in a group’s capacity to get the job done. Conversely, climates characterized by performance-avoid goal orientations demonstrated a significant negative relationship with collective teacher efficacy, underscoring the detrimental effects of fear-driven climates on collaboration and persistence. While results for performance-prove orientations were mixed, patterns suggest that climates overly focused on competition and impression management iv may undermine collective efficacy. Findings emphasize that developing a strong collective learning orientation should be a priority for school leaders striving to build cultures where educators persist despite challenges, embrace growth, and reject deficit thinking. This work contributes to bridging achievement goal theory and social cognitive theory. It offers practical insights for creating equitable learning environments where all students, regardless of race or class, can thrive.

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