«The opportunity to use random assignment - the lotteries - to study and compare two important models
for school decentralization means that the students we compared were very similar in terms of family background, motivation, and anything else you might think of except for the likelihood of attending a charter or pilot school.»
Not exact matches
Widely affirmed proposals call
for the restructure of low - performing
schools, more emphasis on the basics, safer classrooms, more rigorous graduation standards, periodic measurement of progress through some kind of standardized tests, longer days and year - round
schooling,
decentralization into smaller learning communities and greater freedom
for those smaller units, smaller classes, better - qualified teachers and improved salaries, more parental input and more equitable funding.
Decentralization has been a popular theme in
school districts
for a long time.
District
schools are operated by more than 14,000 locally elected boards, and this
decentralization also creates the potential
for wide disparities in
school practice.
Proponents of
decentralization ask, How can a
school be held responsible
for its results if the district is forever meddling in its operations?
Coupled with
school choice,
decentralization promises to encourage innovation while reducing the need
for large, expensive central - office staffs.
Rick Hess wrote a compelling prescription
for school reform based on
decentralization and modesty, and Mike McShane cogently argued in Education Week
for going small.
It provides the rationale and operational details
for a radical
decentralization of
school governance and preserves the legitimacy of a much - diminished, locally elected governing entity.
Stated purposes may obscure far less lofty aims, such as weakening entrenched and distrusted local
school boards, creating the illusion of reform without investing more resources, putting a positive spin on central office downsizing by calling it
decentralization, or simply trying to shift the blame
for failure to the
school itself.
The hard - earned lessons of Kentucky educators have important implications
for other districts and
schools involved in
decentralization.
But now that DPS»
decentralization is the talk of the town, I'm curious what autonomy will mean
for schools» funding.
In studying the
school management approaches of five large urban districts recognized nationally
for their performance, my Harvard University Public Education Leadership Project colleagues — Allen Grossman, Monica C. Higgins, Karen L. Mapp, Geoff Marietta — and I learned that asking whether centralization or
decentralization is better is not the right question.
«It is an urban
school district, and it has undergone various forms of urban
school reform:
decentralization, recentralization and now, the new prescription
for urban
school reform, is to become a charter
school,» said Marytza Gawlik, who teaches in Wayne State University's Education Leadership & Policy Studies Department, in Detroit.
Attention to the
school district's role in improving the quality of teaching and learning subsided in the context of policies that emphasized
decentralization and
school - based management as the engine
for change.
The
decentralization experience of the Chicago public
school system also contributed to the current interest in the role of districts as a positive force
for change.
«In the spirit of
decentralization, the Division of Instruction would like to honor autonomy and innovation by providing each Local District Superintendent with the current A-G data for each school,» reads one document titled Decentralization
decentralization, the Division of Instruction would like to honor autonomy and innovation by providing each Local District Superintendent with the current A-G data
for each
school,» reads one document titled
Decentralization Decentralization of the A-G Plan.
With
decentralization also comes the need
for more secure digital identification and we are currently working with law
schools and law societies on Legaler ID, a way to issue and maintain legal certifications and identity on the blockchain, putting an end to lawyer fraud i.e. no more Mike Ross [from the TV show Suits]!