The shift to federalism and school-based government has profoundly altered the responsibilities of school principals in Nepal. Principals are increasingly required to serve as administrative managers, instructional leaders, strategic planners, and community partners tasked with enhancing educational quality, equity, and accountability. Nevertheless, the training, certification, and professional development of leadership remain disjointed, resulting in a substantial gap between leadership aspirations and capacity. This study analyses the disparity through a qualitative comparative policy analysis of Nepal's educational policies, in conjunction with leadership development frameworks from Australia, Singapore, and Finland. The study examines how cohesive leadership standards, organised preparation, induction, and ongoing professional development enhance effective school leadership in high-performing educational systems, utilising Instructional Leadership Theory, Transformational Leadership Theory, and Professionalisation Theory. The findings reveal that although Nepal's education policies are progressively acknowledging the strategic significance of principals, current recruitment and development practices still prioritise administrative expertise over proven leadership capability. The essay contends that the institutionalisation of National Professional Standards for School Principals will establish a cohesive framework for merit-based recruitment, leadership certification, professional development, and performance assessment. It suggests a tripartite leadership development structure consisting of pre-service certification, contextualised induction and mentoring, and ongoing professional learning to enhance leadership ability throughout principals' careers. The study finds internationally informed ideas that can be modified to Nepal's federal governance structure and varied educational environments, rather than promoting direct policy transfer. Establishing professional leadership standards would elevate principals from mere administrative clerks to visionary instructional and transformational leaders, thereby enhancing teaching quality, student learning, school effectiveness, and sustainable educational reform across Nepal.
Dr. Sunil Thapa (Tue,) studied this question.