This blog is part of our Unlocking Collective Leadership: 7 Conditions for Lasting Impact series, highlighting the conditions that help P20 systems move from individual effort to shared leadership.
Driving Change through Supportive Administration
Educators are constantly navigating a flood of shifting demands. New initiatives. Urgent needs. Limited time. In all this churn, collaboration helps, but it’s not enough. Collective leadership thrives when leaders don’t just “allow” change, but actively support and champion it.
Supportive administration isn’t about checking boxes or offering an open-door policy; it’s about fostering a culture of trust and respect. It’s about ensuring every educator knows their work is seen, valued, and aligned to shared goals.
What is Supportive Administration?
Supportive Administration is the second condition of collective leadership. It refers to the visible, formal support that leaders provide to staff across all roles.
In collective leadership, this looks like:
- Aligning on shared goals
- Creating clear, coordinated plans
- Backing teams with the resources and structures they need to lead
It’s about more than agreement—it’s about shared direction and active reinforcement. When formal leaders and staff are moving together with clarity and consistency, schools are better positioned to turn ideas into action and make improvement stick.
One district that’s seen the impact of this approach firsthand is Clarendon County, where leaders prioritized formal supports to grow teacher leadership across their schools.
Supportive Administration in Practice
Over the last several years, the Clarendon County School District has undergone multiple consolidations, resulting in shifts in both its district identity and the way school teams work together. Despite this unexpected change, the district continues to experience growth.
During the 2023–2024 school year, the number of teachers who saw themselves as leaders jumped by 78%, speaking to the power and impact of a supportive leadership team.
When administrators model trust, make space for teacher voice, and follow through on shared decisions, leadership doesn’t just expand; it sticks. Clarendon County’s experience shows what’s possible when support isn’t just offered, but embedded.
Making Leadership Visible
Being a supportive administrator takes more than good intentions. It requires visible, tangible practices that help staff feel seen, supported, and aligned. Use these questions with your team or as part of an individual reflection to examine how leadership shows up in your daily work.
- What does visible support look like to your team, and are they experiencing it consistently?
- How is space created for others to lead?
- Are your systems and routines reinforcing collective ownership, or working against it?
- What’s one tangible thing you can do this week to show alignment and trust?
Resources for Supportive Administration
Inviting others into your practice allows you to see the work from a different perspective. You can build trust across teams and invite others into the improvement process by fostering intentional feedback loops. This tool walks leaders through a simple process to invite others into decision-making, starting with small steps and building to deeper, sustained collaboration. Use it to build trust, create feedback loops, and shift the leadership culture in your school.
Download the facilitation tool to make your leadership more inclusive, visible, and trusted.
Want help bringing collective leadership to life in your system? Learn more about Mira Education’s approach or reach out to start a conversation.