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Title: How are Schools Governed, Influenced and Financed? Chapter 11


1
How are Schools Governed, Influenced and
Financed?Chapter 11
  • Dr. Paul A. Rodriguez

2
  • Legal responsibility for school governance
    belongs to the state and local school boards.
  • Many other groups exercise some measure of
    influence on educational decisions, either
    through legal authority or through less forma
    means
  • Court rulings in some states have shifted the
    responsibility for public school financing from
    dependence on local property taxes to greater
    reliance on state support
  • The federal governments role in education has
    increased with the passage of the No Child Left
    Behind Act
  • State versus local controllegal responsibility
    for school governance belongs to the states,
    policy decisions and administration have
    traditionally been delegated to local school
    boards
  • Governors play leadership rolethe governors
    office has the power to affect educational policy
    but often chooses to do so only on limited
    issues.
  • Golden Rulegovernors propose and legislatures
    act on budgets that contain funding for school
    districts. This is, the Golden Rule Whoever
    has the Gold makes the rules.

3
  • Policymaking functionthe states responsibility
    for public education requires it to establish an
    organizational framework within which the local
    school districts can function. The result is the
    establishment of a state board of education to
    exercise general control and supervision of
    schools within the state. The state board of
    education is the states educational policymaking
    body for elementary and secondary schools
  • Selection of membersvaries from state to state.
    In most states, members are appointed by the
    governor, in about one-third of the states,
    however, members are elected by popular vote
  • Duties of chief state school officerthe
    executive officer of the state board of
    education, the chief state school officer,
    usually is responsible for the administration of
    public education and reports to the state board
    of education
  • State department of education, also called the
    state department of pubic education, usually
    operates under the direction of the state board
    of education and is administered by the chief
    state school officer
  • The policymaking body of the school district is
    the local school board, which represents the
    citizens

4
  • In the first place, God made idiots. That was
    for practice. Then he made school boards.
  • --Mark Twain, 19th century American Author and
    Humorist
  • School boards lack diversitymost are male,
    between forty-one and sixty, at least 83 have
    annual family incomes exceeding 50,000.
    two-thirds of them have at least bachelors
    degrees. Most are professionals, managers or
    business owners have children in the public
    schools and consider themselves to be
    conservative. They are not typical of the public
    they serve
  • Superintendent of Schoolsis typically a
    professional educator selected by the local
    school board to act as its executive officer and
    as the educational leader and administrator of
    the school district.
  • Superintendents versus Local School Boardsthe
    way they operate with the school board is usually
    characterized by conflict
  • High turnover rate often indicative of
    conflictalthough school boards hire and fire
    superintendents, superintendents are expected to
    lead the board. If they fail to do so, board
    members are likely to act independently, often
    with disastrous consequences

5
  • In building support for their initiatives and
    protecting their programs from attach,
    superintendents must discover their political
    allies and adversaries---no superintendent could
    hope to lead without acting politically
  • --Susan Moore Johnson, Professor at Harvards
    Graduate School of Education
  • Responsibilities of principalare expected to
    function as instructional leaders for their
    schools. Effective principals serve as
    instructional leaders by promoting a productive
    working and learning environment
  • Shortage of principals predictedresearchers are
    predicting a shortage of principals in U. S.
    schools in the coming years
  • Teacher organizations are powerful
  • Just as was is too important to be left to the
    generals, education is too important to be left
    to the educators
  • --Paul Woodring, 20th century American Education
    Author and Professor

6
  • Site-based decision making, has tended to
    increase teachers power. The key idea behind
    site-based decision making is that most changes
    need to occur at the school level
  • Parental influenceparents are their childrens
    first and primary teachers and the only ones who
    follow a childs progress from year to year
  • A parent is the most important teacher a child
    ever has
  • --Joan Beck, American Author on Child Raising
  • Parent-teacher organization (PTO)may or may not
    be affiliated with the national PTA
  • Business plays leading role in reformbusiness
    has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to
    improve elementary and secondary schools
  • Education/economy linkmany business leaders are
    convinced that education reform is essential to
    the health of the U. S. economy
  • Business intrusionsome people cynically view
    businesss push for the expanded use of
    technology in schools as an attempt to create a
    new market for computers and other educational
    technology

7
  • Channel One controversya commercial service that
    delivers ten minutes of news programming directly
    to public school classrooms free of cost in
    exchange for two minutes of advertising
    http//www.channelone.com
  • The classroom isa place in which the claims of
    various political, social and economic interest
    are negotiated. The classroom is both a symbol
    and a product of deadly serious cultural
    bargaining
  • --Neil Postman, American Professor, Media
    Theorist and Cultural Critic
  • Privatization effortssome believe that private
    corporations can operate schools more effectively
    and less expensively than can public entities
  • Cooperation or exploitationthe challenge for
    educators will be to walk the fine line between
    partnerships and cooperation on the one hand and
    exploitation for commercial purposes on the other
    hand
  • Strong court influencethe Supreme Court has
    issued key rulings affecting such important
    educational policies as desegregation, public aid
    to private schools, rights of people with
    disabilities, gender equity, voucher plans and
    sexual harassment
  • Enforcement necessarythe courts cannot do
    everything by themselves. Often judicial rulings
    need to be supported by federal administrative
    and legislative action before they can alter
    educational practice

8
  • Fluctuating federal involvementlevel of
    involvement in education often fluctuates
    depending on whether Republicans or Democrats
    control the White House and Congress and on the
    particular ideology professed by the party in
    power
  • Funding percentages varythe percentages of
    educational expenditures funded by federal, state
    and local sources vary considerably from state to
    state
  • Rising expenditures per pupilvaries from state
    to state
  • Sources of state revenuestate government use a
    combination of sales, personal income, corporate
    income and excise taxes to generate revenues
  • Local governments use property taxrely primarily
    on property taxes for income
  • Michigan reformvoted to eliminate local property
    taxes as a source of revenue for the public
    schools. They increased sales tax by 50 and
    raised taxes on cigarettes to replace the greatly
    reduced property tax, thereby permitting the
    state to reallocate state resources to poorer
    school districts

9
  • Serrano v. Priestheld that California system of
    financing schools on the basis of local property
    taxes violated the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.
    S. Constitution, which provides equal protection
    of the law for all citizens
  • Equality as a state concernmany states contain
    equal protection clauses that can be interpreted
    to include education as a protected right
  • Pressures for equalityeducators, parents and
    public officials are greatly concerned that the
    quality of a childs education should not depend
    on whether the child lives in a school district
    with high property values
  • Categorical aidmoney that must be spent for
    designated purposes stated generally in the
    legislation and more precisely by the federal
    agency administering the funds
  • Block grantssums of money that come with only
    minimal federal restrictions and are transferred
    from the federal government to the state
    governments as a block of money rather than by
    categories
  • Compensatory educationis an approach to creating
    more equal educational opportunities for
    disadvantaged children

10
  • Title I requirementsElementary and Secondary
    Education Act (ESEA), 1965. improving the
    Academic Achievement of the Disadvantaged because
    of money reaches almost every school district and
    thus provides jobs and services in every
    congressional district. Under the 2001
    reauthorization of ESEAcalled the No Child Left
    Behind Act (NCLB)Title I has come to account for
    the largest portion of federal spending on public
    schools.
  • Title I provided more than 210 billion for
    educational services.
  • Head Startvarieties of compensatory education to
    help parents learn how to interact more
    effectively with their babies and young children
    in the areas of cognitive and psychosocial
    development
  • Compensatory education beyond preschooltarget
    older children and focus on basic skill
    instruction, tutoring, or remediation in a
    variety of academic areas
  • Evaluations mixedthere is mixed results.
    However, long-range studies provide indicators of
    program success.
  • Early intervention a keymay provide the key to
    success in compensatory education programs
  • Title Ipoints to recent gains in achievement.
    This will continue to receive funding increases
    in the years to come.

11
  • Key Terms
  • Block grants parent-teacher organization (PTO)
  • Categorical grants privatization
  • Chief state school officer site-based decision
    making
  • Compensatory education state board of education
  • Head Start state department of education
  • Local school board superintendent of schools
  • No Child Left Behind Title I
  • Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
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