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School-Based Management

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1 School-Based Management
February 28, 2008

2 For more than 100 years the lack of a school management methodology has been the cause of countless complaints. But it has been only in the last 30 years that efforts have been made to find a solution to this problem. And, what has resulted so far? Schools continue exactly the same as before Jan Amos Comenius, 1632

3 Summary School-Based Management (SBM): a popular movement
USA, UK, El Salvador, Netherlands have SBM programs SBM far from uniform, encompass wide variety of strategies Typology ranges from autonomous schools to more restrictive Evidence base limited Economics of SBM is little explored empirically

4 Transfer Authority of Activities
School calendar Monitoring & evaluation School plans/grants Dissemination Budget Hiring & firing Curriculum Textbook Infrastructure

5 SBM Goals and Objectives
Increase parent & community participation Empower principals & teachers Build local capacity Improve school quality & efficiency

6 Theory behind SBM Good education not only about physical inputs but about incentives leading to better instruction and learning Choice, competition and demand-side pressure can influence & alter practice Schools can be held accountable for the ‘outputs’ they produce Accountability mechanisms that put people at center of service provision can go long way in making services work & improve outcomes (WDR 2004)

7 Typology of SBM: The Autonomy Continuum
System is decentralized to states of localities, but individual schools have no autonomy UK (GM) Netherlands

8 Typology of SBM: Autonomy-Participation Nexus

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11 From SBM to Outcomes: The Pathways
Those at the local level have more / better information Key decisions about school personnel Key decisions about spending Changes in the educational process Resource mobilization More involvement by the community and parents imply more monitor and more accountability Direct involvement of parents & community in school Links between parental involvement and decisions Changes in accounting Changes in the school climate

12 Summary of Results

13 Time to Impact: Evidence from USA
Source: Borman et al (2003), based on 232 studies

14 How to Implement Impact Evaluations
Randomization at school level is difficult to observe in reality: use some geographical criterion Reallocating students between schools will result in problems of selection It is important to have detailed baseline information If pure randomization is not possible: Randomization of entry time: phase-in approach Encouragement / promotion model: randomization of information about the program If randomization is not an option, quasi-experimental strategies are an alternative: The need of amount and quality of data increases if quasi-experimental approaches are followed

15 Guiding Principles for Implementing School-Based Management Programs
Toolkit is organized around six basic principles Provides the main questions and issues to be considered when designing and implementing SBM type programs

16 Publications 1. What is SBM 2. Does SBM Work 3. How to evaluate SBM
Operational checklist Ongoing: Impact evaluations in Africa, South Asia, Latin America


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