Title: Decentralization in Education in the Transition Countries
1Decentralization in Education in the Transition
Countries
- Péter Radó
- Budapest, 28/05/2008.
2Decentralization in Education
- The meaning of decentralization
- The narrow (management) approach
- The broader (service provision) approach
- The rationale for decentralization
- The direction of change in educational governance
and management systems - Public administration systems
- Education systems
- The regional landscape
- Governance and management
- Education service providers
- The typical obstacles to further decentralization
3The meaning of decentralization in education
- Two approaches to decentralization
- The public administration approach the
distribution of decision-making competencies
among the levels and actors of management of
education (e.g. director of schools lowest
level administration agent) - The service delivery approach the division of
labor between public administration agents and
educational service delivery institutions with
professional, organizational and financial
autonomy. (e.g. director of schools the
manager of school- based decision-making)
4The public administration approach to
decentralization
- Decentralization
- The locus of decision-making devolution of
decision-making competencies to lower (regional,
local, school) levels of management - The actors of decision-making involvement of
non-administrative actors into decision-making
(roles regulation, decision-making,
consultation) - Decentralization versus deconcentration
- The changing role of central governance from
administrative management to strategic steering
of processes in the system problem solving
oriented policy-making - The local level focusing on local accountability
relations
5Local accountability relations in public services
6The education service approach to decentralization
- Underlying assumptions
- Only the self-development efforts of the schools
can improve the effectiveness of education this
requires empowerment based policies. - Key competences are emphasized (not subject
knowledge) the whole school is in the center of
development and not individual teachers
(organizational competences of teachers are more
and more in the emphasized) - As goals are changing in education the required
teacher competences are changing, too
professional development of teachers becomes part
of school based HRM regimes - Consequences
- Organizational, professional and financial
autonomy of the schools is the prerequisite of
organizational learning and improvement - Whole schools are to be held accountable (not
individual teachers)
7A combined view on the design of decentralization
8The rationale for decentralization in education
- Growing scale and complexity (LLL)
- Heterogeneity of the clientele (expansion of
secondary education, inclusion) - Implications of school based quality assurance
- Scarcity of public resources
- Problems in the flow of information
(subsidiarity) - Connecting education with other services
(inherent versus instrumental goals) - The political agenda (democratization and
openness)
9The direction of change management
- From centralized to
- decentralized
- From separated to
- integrated
- From controlled to liberated
- (deregulation)
- ? The transfer of the ownership of schools to
local/regional self-governments - ? Empowering the clients (parents and students)
of educational services - ? Fiscal decentralization from direct allocation
of resources to schools to indirect allocation
(combining bottom-up and top-down financial
planning
10The direction of change educationThe systemic
conditions of organizational learning and
professional accountability
11The regional landscape
- Public administration
- Early nineties decentralization in most CEE
countries, recentralization in the former
Yugoslav countries, no changes in Romania and
Bulgaria - After the turn of the century slow stop and go
decentralization in the SEE region (financing in
Bulgaria, ownership in Croatia, management in
Macedonia), decentralization in the CEE countries
that were lacking behind (Slovakia) - Education
- Strong school autonomy in the Baltic countries,
Poland, Czech Rep., Hungary and Slovenia - Weak school autonomy in Slovakia, Romania
- Lack of school autonomy in Bulgaria and in all
former Yugoslav countries
12Typical obstacles to decentralization in
education in the CEE-SEE region
- Dependence on the central distribution of
resources, the overall overwhelming role of
states - Weak and not sustainable political commitment
- Fear of loosing control in national government
agencies - Weak strategic planning capacities at the
national level - Weak financial and legal accountability
mechanisms, corruption - Weak management capacities at regional and local
levels - Growing efficiency problems in education ?
resistance to take them over - Lacking performance management instruments, lack
of professional support services in education - Weak management capacities in schools