Administrative Immersion, Organizational Flexibility, and Leadership Competitiveness in Green Line Private Schools: Teachers' Perspectives
Arafat Hussein Shalata
*
Sakhnin Academic College for Teacher Education, Israel.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This study examines the interplay between administrative immersion and organizational flexibility, and their combined influence on the competitiveness of administrative leaders in private schools within the Green Line. Drawing on responses from 320 teachers across diverse private schools, the research employs a descriptive methodology integrating correlational and predictive analyses. Three rigorously validated instruments quantitatively assessed administrative immersion, organizational flexibility, and competitiveness, enabling nuanced insights into leadership engagement, institutional adaptability, and organizational performance.
Findings indicate that administrative leaders consistently exhibit high levels of both administrative immersion and organizational flexibility, with both constructs demonstrating strong positive correlations with competitiveness. Statistically significant differences emerged only in relation to years of professional experience, with teachers possessing less than five years of experience reporting higher levels across all variables; no significant differences were found based on gender or academic qualifications. Further, all dimensions of administrative immersion (engagement, dedication, vitality) and organizational flexibility (relational, administrative, structural) were robustly associated with competitiveness. Regression analyses revealed that administrative immersion accounted for 67.4% of the variance in competitiveness, organizational flexibility explained 68.9%, and together, these factors predicted 72.4% of the variance, underscoring their substantial joint predictive power.
The study underscores the critical importance of fostering both deep administrative engagement and organizational flexibility among school leaders to enhance institutional competitiveness. It advocates for targeted professional development, particularly for early-career educators, to strengthen these competencies. By elucidating the interdependence of these constructs, the research offers actionable recommendations for educational policymakers and practitioners, highlighting their foundational role in strategic leadership and organizational transformation.
Keywords: Administrative immersion, organizational flexibility, competitiveness, teachers, administrative leaders