Campus Location

Dallas Campus (Online)

Date of Award

1-2026

Document Type

Dissertation

Department

Organizational Leadership

Degree Name

Doctor of Education

Committee Chair or Primary Advisor

Julie Lane

Second Committee Member or Secondary Advisor

Christie Bledsoe

Third Committee Member or Committee Reader

Javier Flores

Abstract

The stability of leadership in special education is crucial for ensuring regulatory compliance, programmatic quality, and equitable services for students with disabilities. However, U.S. public schools face persistent challenges in retaining special education directors, resulting in a loss of institutional knowledge, service fragmentation, and increased risk of compliance failure. Drawing on self-determination theory and job embeddedness theory, this phenomenological study explored the intrinsic and extrinsic aspects that influence special education directors’ decisions to remain in their roles. Ten experienced special education directors from diverse public school settings in Texas participated in semistructured interviews and follow-up quantitative questionnaires. The analysis revealed five primary interconnected themes that anchor leaders to their positions: supportive network, leadership impact, mission-driven, capacity building, and strategic autonomy. Findings confirmed that retention is driven less by traditional extrinsic aspects (e.g., salary) and more by the satisfaction of core psychological needs. Specifically, retention is predicated on a strong mission-driven commitment and nonnegotiable leadership impact, where supervisors grant the trust necessary for strategic autonomy. Furthermore, fulfillment comes from capacity building, mentoring staff, and fostering a supportive network to combat the role’s professional isolation. The study concludes that longterm stability requires districts to cultivate organizational cultures that translate professional trust into operational authority, reinforce relational support, and actively support the leader’s internal sense of purpose and competence.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

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