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West, Anne – London Review of Education, 2015
This paper explores the governance of school-based and early education in England under the Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition Government (2010-15). It draws on three prominent Coalition policy areas--the academies programme, the pupil premium, and free part-time early education--and focuses on changes to the role played by central government…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Governance, Politics of Education
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Lubienski, Christopher – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2014
Recent reforms in England's education system have been justified on the grounds that other countries have pursued similar approaches to education reform. Many such policies that by-pass or otherwise diminish meso-level institutions demonstrate a commitment to the idea of devolving authority to local actors. The current reforms in England and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Governance
Wilkes, Christopher D.; And Others – 1979
Program evaluation, the evaluation of the performance of a unit of an organization (rather than of specific persons within that unit) against criteria that are consonant with the goals of other units in the organization, is currently the most important mechanism for the increased coordination, or coupling, of various hierarchical levels in the…
Descriptors: Accountability, Centralization, Elementary Secondary Education, Government School Relationship
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Waite, Duncan; Boone, Mike; McGhee, Marla – Journal of School Leadership, 2001
Using Texas's experience with standards and high-stakes testing, this critical sociocultural view of accountability illuminates hidden or neglected aspects of accountability-its meanings, consequences, and the processes by which it is institutionalized. Authority is moving to the state level; teachers, parents, and students have too little…
Descriptors: Accountability, Centralization, Cultural Influences, Democracy
Vitullo-Martin, Thomas W. – Independent School, 1978
The author suggests that, as public agencies make more of our decisions, we lose our power. Soon citizens will no longer be able to continue to make their own choices in education, and large portions of our population will be deprived of fundamental political freedom by the year 2000. (KC)
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Power
Duttweiler, Patricia Cloud – Insights on Educational Policy and Practice, 1988
Numerous dysfunctions result from bureaucratic school organization, including an overemphasis on specialized tasks, routine operating rules, and formal procedures for managing teaching and learning. Such schools are characterized by numerous regulations; formal communications; centralized decision making; and sharp distinctions among…
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Bureaucracy, Centralization, Creativity
Glanz, Jeffrey – 1978
In the early twentieth century, supervisors began to move toward increasing professionalism in their positions. In the late nineteenth century, supervision was characterized by bureaucratic methods in a centralized school management system. Research reveals that after the turn of the century, there was a concerted effort by supervisors to…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Bureaucracy, Centralization, Decentralization
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Strain, Michael – Educational Management and Administration, 1993
Explores the nature and possible consequences of benign and detrimental aspects of defamiliarization occurring in Northern Ireland's schools. Recent legislation, although apparently sharing power, centralizes power by providing for curricular form and content, promoting a certain management ethic, and relocating some key control mechanisms in the…
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Talbert, Joan E. – 1980
This paper presents an exchange-theory view of school authority relations in order to identify patterns of coupling, or interdependencies, within school organizations and to analyze the potential for tighter coupling of administrative and teaching subsystems. The analysis proceeds from an argument that the social-exchange view of administrative…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Administrator Role, Centralization, Elementary Secondary Education
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Brown, Daniel J. – Educational Policy, 1992
A study of five decentralized school districts reveals many reasons why recentralization could occur, including lack of accountability provisions, lack of effectiveness, retrenchment, central office reluctance to share power, and union hostility. Unless districts approach decentralization thoughtfully and with commitment, they may abandon the…
Descriptors: Accountability, Administrative Organization, Centralization, Decentralization
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March, Milton E. – Canadian Administrator, 1981
Outlines findings from a study of four western Canadian provinces that compared teachers', administrators', and school boards' perceived control over educational decision making in 32 areas. Educational decision making was found to be somewhat decentralized, but only in deciding grades do teachers hold the highest degree of control. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Board of Education Role, Centralization, Decentralization
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Guthrie, James W. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1981
Demography, economics, concentrated decision making, and politicization, will constitute the future policymaking environment for education. In addition, these conditions are likely to have a direct effect upon educators themselves; they will provoke higher levels of conflict within and among education organizations. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Centralization, Consolidated Schools, Declining Enrollment, Educational Policy
Braaksma, J. – 1994
The content and assessment of the curriculum is under discussion in many educational systems. Because the curriculum is a product of authority relationships, the role and position of several actors executing the authority relationships in the education system are under question as well. Traditionally, inspectorates, as part of the authority…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Centralization, Curriculum Evaluation, Decentralization
Williams, Richard C.; Marcus, Michelle – 1982
Because public school districts have highly permeable organizational boundaries, analyses of their structures and processes should include consideration of external as well as internal factors. Such analyses have become feasible with the application of general systems theory, which views organizations as functioning units that have continuous…
Descriptors: Administrator Selection, Administrators, Case Studies, Centralization
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Bowers, C. A. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 1998
Computers represent the digital phase of the Industrial Revolution, contribute to centralizing corporate and political power, worsen the growing environmental crisis, and displace local knowledge with data. By framing discussions of computers in terms of these worldwide trends, readers can avoid the simplistic thinking surrounding discussions of…
Descriptors: Centralization, Computer Simulation, Computer Uses in Education, Corporations
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