State of the Superintendent 2024

Selected Findings from the Spring 2024 American School District Panel Survey

Heather L. Schwartz, Melissa Kay Diliberti

ResearchPublished Sep 9, 2024

This is the latest report in the State of the Superintendent series, an annual report intended to provide a reliable, recurring snapshot of the U.S. public school superintendency. Since the American School District Panel began in fall 2020, researchers have periodically surveyed superintendents about their job, focusing on job-related stressors, job satisfaction, and intentions to remain in the profession. New for this year was a question about which activities take up the largest share of superintendents' time. The survey revealed a divide between superintendents of small districts (those with fewer than 3,000 students) and large districts (those serving 10,000 or more students). For example, in spring 2024, district budgets topped small-district superintendents' list of stressors, but the intrusion of political issues and opinions into schooling was the most common stressor among large-district superintendents. Meanwhile, superintendents of large districts stated that their most time-consuming activities were external and internal communications, whereas those in small districts spent more time on budgets and on school facility maintenance and operations. The differences are so large as to suggest that the very job of the superintendent—and, therefore, likely the skills needed most to succeed in the job—is substantially different in large (urban) versus small (mostly rural) districts.

Key Findings

  • In spring 2024, district budgets topped superintendents' list of stressors in small districts (those that enroll fewer than 3,000 students), and the intrusion of political issues and opinions into schooling was the most common stressor among superintendents in large districts (those serving 10,000 or more students).
  • The share of superintendents reporting the intrusion of political issues and opinions into schooling as a source of work stress declined by 28 percentage points between spring 2023 and spring 2024, from 88 percent to 60 percent.
  • As in spring 2023, about six out of every ten superintendents reported in spring 2024 that the stresses of their job are worth it.
  • Not only was district budgets a top stressor, but superintendents—especially those in small districts—identified budget management as among their most time-consuming activities.
  • Superintendents of large districts stated that their most time-consuming activities were external and internal communications, whereas those in small districts spent more time on budgets and on school facility maintenance and operations.

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Citation

RAND Style Manual
Schwartz, Heather L. and Melissa Kay Diliberti, State of the Superintendent 2024: Selected Findings from the Spring 2024 American School District Panel Survey, RAND Corporation, RR-A956-25, 2024. As of October 6, 2024: https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA956-25.html
Chicago Manual of Style
Schwartz, Heather L. and Melissa Kay Diliberti, State of the Superintendent 2024: Selected Findings from the Spring 2024 American School District Panel Survey. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 2024. https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA956-25.html.
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This research was sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and conducted by RAND Education and Labor.

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