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Schlechty, Phillip C. – American School Board Journal, 1992
The fundamental job of school board members is to view themselves as moral and cultural leaders and to transform the needs of groups to a higher and more noble framework. Lists the National School Boards Association's statement on the governance role of the local school board. (MLF)
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Boards of Education, Community Control, Educational Change
Hess, Frederick M. – American School Board Journal, 2003
Elected school boards' skeptical eyes can guard against bad management practices and ensure that different voices get heard. Problems with board governance are a product of too little democracy. A democratic reform strategy would make board elections partisan, hold them on the same day as elections for more prominent state or national offices,…
Descriptors: Accountability, Administrator Effectiveness, Board of Education Policy, Boards of Education
Zeigler, Harmon – 1974
Even though public school districts are structured with the expectation of responsive governance, most school boards are not particularly responsive to their constituents. School boards from politically contentious districts tend to be more responsive, but they have even less success challenging the dominance of the superintendent than do less…
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Boards of Education, Community Control, Democratic Values
Feldman, Sandra – 1968
Although the break-up of the unresponsive school bureaucracy in New York will be a move toward greater accountability, the basic question is: will this raise achievement levels? Its possible advantagees include: the increase in both the operating efficiency of the schools and the responsiveness of schools to the lay public; increased student fate…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Community Control, Decentralization, Educational Opportunities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Watras, Joseph – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 1995
Among the first of the Model Cities programs, Dayton's program was directed by African American community activists, who instituted important school and neighborhood reforms but blocked efforts to racially desegregate the public schools. The story of Dayton's Model Cities Demonstration Project raises important questions about whether urban renewal…
Descriptors: Activism, Black Education, Boards of Education, Community Control
Gittell, Marilyn – 1970
The major stimulus of the community school movement is a general dissatisfaction with the existing public education system, the greatest thrust having come from the minority groups. The two major difficulties appear to be the creation of independent schools or districts under local community control, and the development of adequate funding…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Community Control, Community Involvement, Community Schools
Cheng, Charles W. – 1976
The major focus of this study is on altering the current structure of collective bargaining in public education to provide for adequate community participation. Concentrating on big city school systems where minorities and the poor have historically been apart from the educational policy-making process, the study finds that the scope of bargaining…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Citizen Participation, Collective Bargaining, Community Control
Ravitz, Mel – 1970
If needed significant educational change is to be achieved, some countervailing power source capable of confronting administrative bureaucracy and making it conform to the present needs of the public must be established. Community control, the subdivision of the large system into appropriate communities and the control of each community by its…
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Boards of Education, Community Control, Educational Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Suina-Lowery, Carletta – Journal of American Indian Education, 1979
Federal and state bilingual education legislation since 1923 has not enhanced the education of Pueblo Indian children in New Mexico. Lacking public school control, Pueblo Indians have resisted the establishment of bilingual education programs for their children. Bilingual-bicultural program development must be preceded by giving Pueblos community…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Bilingual Education