Page 30 of 106
1 28 29 30 31 32 106

België: School in Blankenberge pakt onderwijs helemaal anders aan

België / 25 februari 2018 / Auteur: Karel Cambien / Bron: Madeinwest-vlaanderen

Er zijn in Vlaanderen al heel wat scholen die het anders doen: vakoverschrijdende lessen, teamteaching, modulaire leerruimtes, coachend begeleiden. De Sint-Jozef Sint-Pieter School in Blankenberge is één van die handvol scholen. Tijdens het EduNext Leerfestival dat deze week (21 februari) plaats vindt in in Brussel, vertellen en tonen directeurs, leraren en leerlingen van achttien innovatieve onderwijspraktijken waarom, hoe en wat ze anders doen. Een en ander kan op termijn ook het bedrijfsleven beïnvloeden.   

Al voor de zesde keer organiseert de vzw EduNext het Leerfestival, waar in een festivalsetting met denk- en doepodia enkele honderden leraren, directeuren, studenten en mensen uit het bedrijfsleven worden geïnspireerd met innovatieve praktijkvoorbeelden uit het Vlaamse en Nederlandse onderwijs. Doel is de festivalgangers te motiveren en stimuleren om ook onderwijsvernieuwing van binnenuit te realiseren. “Dat is veel makkelijker als je een voorbeeld kunt zien”, meent Dirk De Boe, auteur en bezieler van ‘EduNext, transformeer je school van binnenuit’ . “Wij zijn ervan overtuigd dat als je het met je eigen ogen ziet, je dan een klik maakt. En als een school beslist het anders te gaan doen, dan kunnen ze dat ook. Er is voldoende ruimte binnen de leerplannen om onderwijs anders te organiseren en te geven via werk-, leer- en evaluatievormen, kortom, om anders om te gaan met leerlingen en studenten.”

Begin van een onderwijsrevolutie

De Nederlandse professor transitiekunde Jan Rotmans, keynotespreker op het festival, is het daar hartstochtelijk mee eens: “We staan aan het begin van een onderwijsrevolutie”, zegt Rotmans. “Je voelt de weerstand, en veel leraren zitten er helemaal niet op te wachten. Dat begrijp ik, omdat ze al vijftig jaar top-down onderwijsvernieuwing over zich heen hebben gekregen. Ik pleit daarom voor een onderwijs van onderop. Laat elke school dat zelf uitzoeken en bepalen. Ga dat niet collectief opleggen van bovenaf. Dat hebben we decennia gedaan en dat werkt niet. Het geeft alleen maar meer werkdruk, meer stress, meer bureaucratie. Geef elke school de ruimte en de vrijheid om dat zelf uit te vinden.”

De initiatiefnemers hebben het over ‘de school van de toekomst’. De andere aanpak kan op termijn ook impact hebben op het bedrijfsleven, waarbij medewerkers veel autonomer, zeg maar meer intrapreneur gericht, functioneren.

Bron van het nieuws:

http://www.madeinwest-vlaanderen.be/nieuws/school-in-blankenberge-pakt-onderwijs-helemaal-anders-aan/

Comparte este contenido:

6 key insights into the data and information education leaders want most

Por: brookings.edu/21-02-2018

When data advocates promote evidence-based decision-making in education systems, they rarely specify who the intended users are, for what purpose, and what kinds of data are needed. The implicit assumption is: by everyone, for everything, and any data.

But since collecting, processing, and communicating data require substantial resources, it is prudent to assess whether data produced are indeed accessible and valuable to key decision-makers. Surprisingly little systematic research exists on the types of information education decision-makers in developing countries value most—and why.

In a new report, Toward data-driven education systems: Insights into using information to measure results and manage change, the Center for Universal Education at the Brookings and AidData offer insights to those very questions. We analyze the results of two unique surveys that asked education policymakers in low- and middle-income countries about their use of data in decision-making. Survey participants included senior- and mid-level government officials, in-country staff of development partner organizations, and domestic civil society leaders, among others. (For more details on the surveys, see page 18 in the report.)

The report aims to help the global education community take stock of what information decision-makers actually use and offer practical recommendations to help those who fund and produce education data to be more responsive to what decision-makers want and need. We summarize the findings below:

Finding 1: Having enough information is seldom the decisive factor in making most education decisions; instead, decision-makers desire to have sufficient government capacity.

cue_data-driven-education_figure1

Enacting education policies, changing programs, and allocating resources are complex decisions that demand weighing multiple factors, such as having sufficient capacity and financial resources, having enough information, and having the support of the public. So where do data and information fall within a decision-maker’s cost-benefit analysis?

We found that information is not as important as technical capacity, financing, and political support. Some decisions, however, depend more on having sufficient data and information, such as creating or abolishing schools or grades, and testing students. One possible explanation could be that leaders feel they need strong justification (via an evidence base) for these decisions which could become easily politicized.

Finding 2: Education decision-makers use evidence to support the policymaking process, for both retrospective assessment and forward-looking activities

cue_data-driven-education_figure2

But while information may not be the most decisive factor in education decisions, its role is significant. We found that decision-makers in the education sector are more likely to use data and analysis as compared to other sectors (such as health and governance), including for forward-looking purposes, such as design and implementation of policies or programs, as well as retrospective assessments of past performance. As shown in Figure 2, most education sector decision-makers (over 70 percent) report using data or analysis fairly consistently throughout the policymaking process.

Finding 3: Education decision-makers most often use national statistics from domestic sources and program evaluation data from international sources.

cue_data-driven-education_figure3

Decision-makers overwhelmingly rely on national statistics from domestic sources and program evaluation data from international organizations. The high use of national statistics points to the salience of such data for each country, including, for example, dropout rates for primary school students by district or municipality, the number of schools providing secondary education in each village, or pupil-teacher ratios in urban vs. rural areas.

Finding 4: Education decision-makers consider administrative data and program evaluations most essential, and want more of the latter, signaling a gap between need and supply.

cue_data-driven-education_table1

We asked leaders about their wish list—what types of information would they want more of? We found that those who allocate and manage resources place a premium on administrative data (e.g., number of schools, teachers, students) and government budget and expenditure data (e.g., school-level budgets, expenditure per student). Meanwhile, those working on personnel management need teacher performance data, whereas leaders tasked with overseeing instructional matters need program evaluation data and student-level assessment data. Given respondents’ wish lists, we identified four opportunities for data producers to respond to unmet demand: (1) program performance and evaluation data; (2) budget and expenditure data; (3) student-level assessment data; and (4) teacher performance data.

Finding 5: Education decision-makers value domestic data that reflect local context and point to policy actions, and improving the timeliness and accessibility of information will make it more helpful.

cue_data-driven-education_figure4

Having identified some of the gaps that exist in meeting the needs of education decision-makers, we asked what producers and funders of data should do better or differently to meet the data demands. Leaders said that data from both domestic and international sources were most helpful when they provide information that reflects the local context. They also viewed information from international sources as most helpful because it provides policy recommendations (43 percent) and is often accompanied by critical financial, material, or technical support (36 percent). Leaders viewed domestic data as helpful when it was available at the right level of aggregation, as well as timely, trustworthy, and insightful.

cue_data-driven-education_figure5

When asked what improvements producers could undertake to make data more valuable, respondents suggest improving the timeliness and accessibility, as well as improving data disaggregation, accuracy, and trustworthiness. The respondents requested data from the national government, in particular, to be more accessible and disaggregated.

Finding 6: Decision-makers strongly support strengthening their countries’ education management information system (EMIS) to bolster their education data ecosystem.

cue_data-driven-education_figure6

Beyond finding general areas of improvement for education data, we also asked respondents to rank a list of specific solutions. Respondents largely agreed on the seven solutions proposed, rating all of them as “extremely important”, on average. But of the seven solutions, the recommendation to strengthen the EMIS within the education ministry resonated with the highest number of respondents.

Moving from data generation to impact

The path from data generation to impact is not simple, automatic, or quick. The seemingly straightforward story of information supply, demand, and use is complicated by users’ norms (how they prefer to make decisions), relationships (whom they know and trust), and capacities (their confidence and ability to turn data into actionable insights). The process of moving from data generation to use and, ultimately, to impact on education outcomes must also take into account the different institutional environments (i.e., political context) that may incentivize or dampen efforts to make decisions based upon evidence.

Most essentially, though, investments in data creation must be matched by an equal (or greater) emphasis on increasing the use of evidence by decision-makers, built from a strong understanding of what data and information they use, value, and want. Understanding why education decision-makers and influencers do not notice, value, or use data that are produced by their own statistical agencies or by international organizations deserves more attention than it has received thus far.

*Fuente: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/education-plus-development/2018/02/20/6-key-insights-into-the-data-and-information-education-leaders-want-most/

Comparte este contenido:

9 claves para establecer un estilo democrático en el aula

Por: Haydee Mesa

Aunque no existe una receta mágica que te garantice el estilo perfecto de relacionarte con tu alumno, hoy por hoy, sabemos que estilo educativo que más favorece el desarrollo cognitivo es el democrático: aquél que a través del diálogo hace al alumno protagonista de su propia educación.

Este despliegue de confianza en el potencial del niño lo lleva a asumir responsabilidades adaptadas a su desarrollo y contando siempre con el apoyo de un “amoroso educador que por experiencia propia sabe que las cosas no se pueden hacer perfectas”. El resultado es una plantilla de alumnos con menor inseguridad y mayor autoestima.

He aquí algunas  claves  en las  que apoyarte para  ejercer  un estilo  democrático basado  en  la confianza y el diálogo, que, por obvias que parezcan, no siempre son aplicadas:

1. Establecer normas de comportamiento claras con una sencilla y corta explicación sobre tus motivos. De este modo, tendrán claro lo que pueden y lo que no pueden hacer.

2. Sé empático con cualquier respuesta emocional que manifiesten tus alumnos frente al límite, mostrando tu cariño y aceptación. Respeta su llanto de frustración o su enfado si esa es su reacción. Hazle un hueco a su emoción sin ignorarlo, sin frialdad ni mala cara. Realmente tiene derecho a enfadarse o manifestar su enfado ante un límite. Si respetas su emoción, cuando haya pasado estarás ahí para abrazarlo y repetirle con cariño y firmeza la norma. Así, habrás mantenido tu límite con cariño y respeto. Ser empático no te resta firmeza.

3. Escucha su punto de vista sobre el tema. Quizá su perspectiva pueda aportarte algo para reestructurar o enriquecer la norma o hasta para suprimirla si realmente no es tan necesaria como creíste en un principio. Si realmente es necesaria así, mantenla con firmeza, no con enfado. Básate en el dialogo y la comprensión.

4. No enjuicies al niño, sino a su acción ayudándolo a ver las consecuencias que ésta tiene. No digas “eres malo”, sino “esto que hiciste no está bien”, por esto y por lo otro. Haced una lista de consecuencias juntos.

5. Apóyalo a que tome decisiones por sí mismo. En función de su edad ayudándolo a asumir.

6. Ayúdalo a asumir la responsabilidad de sus decisiones. Con mucho cariño y respeto ayúdalo a ver, cuando algo no salió como él quiso, todas las cosas que aprendió con esta nueva experiencia y que ahora puede aplicar a la próxima. Enséñale que los “supuestos errores” son grandes maestros.

7. Limítate a estar siempre presente para guiarlos y orientarlos dejando que actúe por sí mismo. Evita la tentación de intervenir a menos que él te lo pida.

8. Ofrécele las herramientas para solucionar sus conflictos pero no intervengas en ellos en la medida de lo posible.

9. Demuéstrale siempre tu cariño. Esto es lo que verdaderamente le va hacer confiar en la norma e infundirle fuerza para aceptarla.

Fuente: http://www.educaciontrespuntocero.com/recursos/educacion-emocional/9-claves-establecer-estilo-democratico-aula/42713.html

Comparte este contenido:

España: El TC tumba la «vía Wert» para escolarizar en castellano con fondos públicos

Por: abc.es/21-02-2018

Estaba condenada al fracaso, llevaba casi un año en punto muerto y ahora el Tribunal Constitucional (TC) le ha dado la estocada definitiva. El alto tribunal ha anulado por «insconstitucional» la conocida como «vía Wert», que ofrecía a los padres la posibilidad de escolarizar a sus hijos en castellano en Cataluña con fondos públicos y sin tener que litigar durante años en los tribunales. La sentencia, aprobada por unanimidad, llega en un momento de máxima sensibilidad en Cataluña después de que hace unos días el Gobierno, que en virtud del 155 tiene competencias en la Consejería de Enseñanza, anunciara que estudia mover hilos para que el castellano recupere el papel de lengua vehicular en esta comumidad.

Una vía muerta

La «vía Wert» o «vía Lomce», habilitada en 2013 por el entonces ministro de Educación José Ignacio Wert , ofrecía 6.000 euros de ayuda –luego la cantidad se rebajó– a las familias para sufragar la enseñanza bilingüe de sus hijos, dinero que después el Gobierno descontaba a la Generalitat. En la práctica, la propuesta embarrancó, ya que no habían centros públicos que ofrecieran escolarización en castellano, lo que obligó a los padres a matricular a sus hijos en centros de élite privados con matrículas inaccesibles. Desde un principio, los padres –medio centenar han accedido a las ayudas– entendieron que era una vía muerta.

La sentencia del TC, hecha pública ayer y que responde a un recurso de inconstitucionalidad interpuesto por la Generalitat en 2014, considera que esta vía para garantizar el castellano es «inconstitucional» y no respeta el reparto de competencias entre el Estado y la Comunidad Autónoma.

El fallo del alto tribunal, aprobado por unanimidad, se refiere, en concreto, «a la capacidad del Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, a través de la Alta Inspección de Educación, para decidir sobre la escolarización de esos alumnos en centros privados y a su financiación».

Según el TC, «la alta inspección constituye una competencia estatal de vigilancia, pero no un control genérico e indeterminado que implique dependencia jerárquica de las Comunidades Autónomasrespecto a la Administración del Estado». De igual modo, la sentencia rechaza que, «a través de la alta inspección, el Estado asuma competencias que corresponden a las comunidades autónomas».

«Corresponde al Estado velar por el respeto de los derechos lingüísticos en el sistema educativo, pero también que tal función ha de desplegarse sin desbordar las competencias que constitucionalmente le están reservadas», señala el fallo.

La sentencia también dirime otras cuestiones sobre la Lomce y, así, declara inconstitucional que el Gobierno pueda establecer, vía reglamento, las bases de la educación plurilingüe (impartición de asignaturas no lingüísticas en lenguas extranjeras) desde el segundo ciclo de Educación Infantil hasta Bachillerato, previa consulta a las Comunidades Autónomas.

El Tribunal sostiene que la ley no especifica el criterio legal que da cobertura a esta competencia del Gobierno para el desarrollo reglamentario básico. Tampoco puede justificarse en que la educación plurilingüe tenga un carácter excepcional, pues, todo lo contrario, abarca prácticamente a todas las enseñanzas no universitarias.

Por otro lado, el Tribunal sí considera conformes a la Constitución los preceptos que atribuyen al Ministerio de Educación la competencia para regular las pruebas de evaluación finales de ESO y Bachillerato, cuya superación es necesaria para la obtención de los títulos académicos, incluyendo la de establecer los criterios de evaluación y las características de las pruebas para cada convocatoria.

Se trata del ejercicio de la competencia estatal para regular las «condiciones de obtención, expedición y homologación de títulos académicos y profesionales». Asimismo, recuerda que compete al Gobierno el fijar «las llamdas enseñanzas mínimas».

*Fuente: http://www.abc.es/sociedad/abci-constitucional-anula-sistema-lomce-para-garantizar-escolarizacion-castellano-cataluna-201802201344_noticia.html

Comparte este contenido:

Los peores resultados educativos de toda España

España/24 de Febrero de 2018/Autor: Editorial/Mallorca Diario

No es la primera vez que los estudiantes de nuestra comunidad ofrecen unos pésimos índices en los rankings de calificaciones y resultados escolares. En esta ocasión, el dato conocido este jueves indica que los estudiantes de Balears obtuvieron la peor media de toda España en el examen de Lengua Castellana y Literatura de la última convocatoria de selectividad.

En concreto, un 5,64, frente a una media nacional de 6,45, y tan sólo un 71 por ciento de aprobados. Las otras comunidades bilingües cosecharon mejores calificaciones que Balears; en el caso de Cataluña, por ejemplo, sus estudiantes obtuvieron un 6,41 de nota media en castellano y un 83 por ciento de aprobados, lo que la sitúa en la zona alta de la tabla. Parece, por tanto, que el mal resultado no es atribuible a la existencia de varias lenguas oficiales sino a errores estructurales en la planificación de los estudios.

Por otro lado, hace unas pocas semanas conocíamos la tasa de abandono escolar en nuestra comunidad: un 26,5 por ciento de los estudiantes baleares no acaban sus estudios, lo que representa 8 puntos por encima de la media española y 15 puntos más que la media europea.

La conselleria debería tomarse muy en serio estas cifras, que no son puntuales ni aisladas, sino que se vienen produciendo de forma reiterada desde hace demasiado tiempo. El departamento que dirige Martí March tiene margen para actuar en aquellos puntos donde ostenta la competencia directa. No basta con repetir que aquí es muy fácil acceder al mercado de trabajo de forma temprana, o confiar todo cambio a los acuerdos surgidos de iniciativas como las de «Illes per un Pacte». Se trata de poner medios y marcar objetivos sin perder un día más. Y hacerlo, obviamente, de forma consensuada con todas las fuerzas políticas para asegurar la perdurabilidad del sistema.

Cuando se habla de educación en Balears se escuchan muchas opiniones acerca de la lengua, los barracones y, últimamente, hasta de sexo. Sin dejar de ser importante todo ello, a muchos ciudadanos les queda la sensación de que los responsables políticos no atienden lo nuclear del asunto, que es formar personas para que se desenvuelvan con los mejores y más competitivos recursos en el mundo que les tocará vivir. Mientras tanto, mientras consellers como Martí March siguen suspendiendo su principal asignatura, pasan los años y el grueso de nuestros jóvenes siguen presentando serias deficiencias que los hacen menos competentes y peor formados que los de otras regiones de nuestro entorno.

Fuente: http://www.mallorcadiario.com/noticia/515009/editorial/los-peores-resultados-educativos-de-toda-espana.html

Comparte este contenido:

“Every Kid Is Money”: Market-Like Competition and School Leader Strategies in New Orleans

Por: Huriya Jabbar

The University of Texas at Austin

Charter-school policies have been enacted for many different reasons. However, in policy debates, proponents and opponents of charter schools alike have framed them as vehicles for introducing market mechanisms into districts (Henig, 2008). Scholars such as Chubb and Moe (1990) drew on the decades-old ideas of Friedman

(1962) and others to argue that markets were more efficient and more responsive to parents than democratic control, and market tenets have since helped to shape education policy. A basic assumption underlying these policies is that more choice and competition will break up state monopolies to improve the quality and lower the costs of essential government services (Sclar, 2001). Although some advocates argue that choice is itself the point of such policies, a more compelling and widespread aim is to improve all schools through competition (Wohlstetter, Smith, & Farrell, 2013). School choice is thus intended not only to serve families who actively choose; it also introduces market pressures into unresponsive districts and thereby improves education for all students, a “tide that lifts all boats” (Hoxby, 2002). If schools do not respond to competitive pressure by, for example, improving their academic services and innovating (Adnett & Davies, 1999), they risk losing students and the funding that accompanies them. This could then lead to school closure. Although existing research has examined whether competition improves student achievement, it is also important to examine how that might occur and what the consequences of such policies are. Prior work that examines the effects of competition, measured through proxies such as geographic density or loss of market share, has primarily used quantitative methods (e.g., Bettinger, 2005; Hoxby, 2002; Ni, 2009; Zimmer & Buddin, 2005). This approach to studying competition has yielded small effects and mixed results, and because of the focus on student outcomes, it has rarely examined other possible outcomes of competition that are important to capture, such as changes to budgetary allocations (Arsen & Ni, 2012) or increased stratification of students (Frankenberg, Seigel-Hawley, & Wang, 2010; Hsieh & Urquiola, 2003), let alone the mechanisms by which such outcomes occur.

Few studies examine the strategic actions of school leaders who work in a competitive environment (for exceptions, see Holme, Carkhum, & Rangel, 2013; Jennings, 2010). School leaders may choose from a large typology of responses to competitive pressure, ranging from academic and curricular changes to promotional or marketing activities (Woods, Bagley, & Glatter, 1998). Schools’ positions in the marketplace, based on enrollment, funding, and performance, as well as their perceptions of competition, affect the ways in which school leaders respond (e.g., Jennings, 2010; Ladd & Fiske, 2003).

In this study, I investigate the competitive strategies that are used by 30 school leaders in the market-oriented environment of New Orleans, the circumstances under which school leaders use these strategies, and their implications for students and communities. In the year of this study, more than 84% of students in New Orleans attended charter schools, making it an ideal site to explore market competition. Existing empirical work has been constrained by the relatively low charter-school density in most districts. Therefore, in this study I examine how theoretical expectations of market behaviors play out in a district where market forces are likely stronger. Building on existing qualitative studies, I document a broader range of school leaders’ strategies and examine the conditions that mediate them. My results indicate that school leaders used a variety of strategies in response to competition. Although some school leaders reported using academic and operational strategies, some responded by, for example, finding a niche in the market, expanding extracurricular programs, marketing, and screening out students. Most importantly, only one third of school leaders reported adopting substantive changes, such as academic and operational improvement, and many more focused on marketing or promotional activities. In some cases, school leaders screened or selected students, practices that have important implications for equity. These patterns represent the range of strategies school leaders adopted in response to the immense competitive pressure in New Orleans. Because of the scale of its reforms, New Orleans is unique, but its reforms are not. They are, in fact, being implemented to some degree in most urban districts across the United States. The case of  New Orleans thus illustrates what happens when these reforms go “to scale.” Indeed, in cities such as Detroit and Washington, D.C., charter-school market share is catching up to New Orleans. It is thus important to inform these policy discussions with empirical evidence from policy-relevant sites such as New Orleans.

New Orleans is a “critical” case (Patton, 1990) for studying school leaders’ strategies under market pressure because of its high charter-school market share. It should yield the most information and contribute most to the development of theory about competitive behaviors and market pressures in schools because of its scale. If competition is indeed occurring as a result of expanded choice, we are most likely to observe it in New Orleans. The case thus elaborates and extends theory about how markets, well theorized and tested in the private sector, actually operate in public-sector institutions such as schools.

 Conceptual Framework

The theory of competition, even as it applies to the private sector, has traditionally had a vague conception of competitive processes, and the theory becomes even more speculative when applied to the public sector. Much of the research on competition analyzes the structure of an industry and how competitive it is; in other words, competition is understood as a state rather than a process (Barney, 1986). For example, competitiveness is measured by an industry’s barriers to entry, the number and relative size of firms, and the degree of product differentiation, as well as consumers’ overall sensitivity to price changes (Barney, 1986). In education, researchers have also measured competition primarily by its structure: the number of surrounding schools in a fixed geographic area or the number of students moving between schools. The focus on structure provides little understanding of firm strategy (Porter, 1981), except to suggest that firms may increase barriers to entry or differentiate their product to have a competitive edge.

Scholars have thus called for an examination of competition as a process (Burt, 1992; Ferlie, 1992; McNulty, 1968), whereby actors in firms develop strategies, take action, and compete with one another.

To compete, a school leader must recognize market pressures and respond accordingly (Ni & Arsen, 2010). For example, if a school loses students, the leader might first identify the cause of declining enrollment (e.g., parent dissatisfaction) and then select an appropriate response. School leaders’ perceptions of competition may matter as much or more than the typical proxies for competition (e.g., geographic density) for predicting schools’ strategic responses (Levacic, 2004). School leaders might feel more or less competition depending on a variety of factors, including knowledge of competitors (Holme et al., 2013), geographic density or loss of market share (e.g., Hoxby, 2002; Ni, 2009), or school and principal characteristics (Jabbar, 2014). School leaders might develop their own responses to competition after they scan the market for the strategic actions of other schools (Woods et al., 1998). It is thus as important to examine how schools interact with one another as understanding how they react to parents’ demands or preferences. To understand how competition might lead to school improvement, it is thus important to examine how school leaders actually perceive and respond to market pressures and how schools’ contexts influence their strategies.

Schools may experience competition differently because of their “status” or position in the market hierarchy. One definition of status is the extent to which a school is viewed as a competitor by other schools in the local education marketplace (Wasserman & Faust, 1994). Highstatus schools are ones that many other schools view as competitors. Status can also arise from being part of a prominent charter network or having high achievement. A school’s awareness of its status in the market hierarchy might inform its strategic actions in response to competition; schools at the bottom may feel they are unable to compete, whereas schools at the top might feel they are “above the fray” (Ladd & Fiske, 2003). A school leader’s capacity and knowledge of other actors may also moderate competitive effects in school districts; even when principals are aware that they are losing students to other schools, they may not be able to identify those schools or respond in productive ways (Holme et al., 2013) because of a lack of resources or their status in the marketplace. The competitive process as conceptualized in this study. Schools experience competitive pressures, and then adopt various strategies as a result, mediated by school conditions.

School leaders might respond to competition in a variety of ways (for a typology, see Bagley, 2006). They might adopt academic or curricular strategies (Goldhaber & Eide, 2003), although there is little evidence to date that competition actually elicits this type of response (Davis, 2013; Kasman & Loeb, 2013). School leaders might change the existing allocation of resources (Arsen & Ni, 2012; Ghosh, 2010) to improve operational efficiency, or they might differentiate their products, engaging in monopolistic competition (Chamberlin, 1933; Robinson, 1933) by developing strategies to exploit their uniqueness, protect their market share, and buffer themselves from competition. School leaders, for example, might develop specialized programs within their schools or position their entire schools to fill a niche (Woods et al., 1998). When school leaders form niches, they are not necessarily improving their existing programs and offerings, but developing new ones. Such programs might generate allocative efficiency (Glomm, Harris, & Lo, 2005), when schools and students become better matched. Schools may also respond to competition by engaging in promotional activities, such as marketing (Gewirtz, Ball, & Bowe, 1995; Lubienski, 2007), or they might select, recruit, and discipline students to shape their student bodies, what Jennings (2010) calls “schools’ choice.” Selection of students can occur via locational decisions (Lubienski, Gulosino, & Weitzel, 2009), marketing activities, or outright cream skimming and cropping (Welner, 2013).

A small number of qualitative studies have examined schools’ competitive strategies in other contexts (Gewirtz et al., 1995; Holme et al., 2013; Jennings, 2010; Woods et al., 1998). This study significantly extends such prior work by, first, examining a large representative sample of 30 schools in a district and, second, examining the conditions under which schools pursue particular strategies. Beginning with the process of competition and then working toward its results may be a “less elegant route for theory,” but it is arguably “one that veers closer to the reality of competition as we experience it” (Burt, 1992).

 Study Design

This study uses case-study methods to explore the range of actions reported by school leaders in response to competition and how context influences their reported behaviors. Case studies allow researchers to explore complex phenomena that have been incompletely conceptualized (Creswell, 2003), as with market behavior in schools.

Site Selection: New Orleans as a “Critical” Case

Reformers, advocates, and policymakers have called New Orleans a model for school reform (Harris, 2013). In 2005, Hurricane Katrina and the resulting flood damaged much of the city and many of its schools. The state-run Recovery School District (RSD) had been established in 2003 to take over failing schools, improve them, and return them to the traditional school board. In the post-storm chaos, legislation was passed to give the RSD a majority of the city’s schools. The traditional Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB) retained only non-failing schools. Although in previous years, parents had to apply to charter schools individually, in 2012, the RSD instituted a common application system, the One App, for its schools. By the end of the year, direct-run schools in the OPSB would also join the One App so that parents could rate them alongside RSD schools. OPSB’s high-performing charter schools, however, were not required to join until charter renewal.

Studies of competition in other sites have been limited by charter-school enrollment that is too low to create sufficient market pressure. This is not the case in New Orleans, where 84% of students attended charter schools in 2012–2013. “New Orleans offers a unique case, perhaps best epitomizing competitive models for education” (Lubienski et al., 2009, p. 615). Although New Orleans offers a unique site to explore market dynamics, its model is migrating to many other cities in the United States (Lake & Hill, 2009).

 

Sampling Schools Within New Orleans

Geographic density was a key variable in previous studies of competition, which predicted that a school would feel greater competition when surrounded by more schools, so I used a geospatial sampling strategy. I mapped all schools in New Orleans and then counted, for each school, the number of other schools with overlapping grade levels within a 2-mile radius. I sorted schools bythis number and created three equal strata, representing schools in low-, medium-, and high-density areas. I randomly selected 10 schools from each stratum, resulting in a set of 30 schools that had representative percentages of schools from both the RSD and OPSB, including charter and direct-run schools, and reflected the distribution of grade levels (e.g., elementary, middle, high) in New Orleans.

 

School Leaders’ Responses to Competitive Pressure

Most school leaders studied in New Orleans felt competitive pressure and reported competing with other schools. Of the 30 schools in this study, 29 reported at least 1 competitor. Most of them also defined competition in terms of enrollment and observed that school-choice policies generated competition for students and their associated dollars. For example, when asked whether their school competed with other schools for students, responses included emphatic affirmatives (“Yes, Lord!” and “Absolutely!”), as well as comments such as “Every kid is money”; “Enrollment runs the budget; the budget runs the enrollment”; and

“We all want our [student] numbers up so we can get more money, more funding.” Other principals explained this relationship in greater detail:

Choice is a competition, by the way, for students. It’s the whole idea. Parents get to choose a school that they feel has the best fit for their family, that they feel is going to do a good job of teaching their child . . . there is a competition built in with a choice system. (Principal, Hicks Elementary)

We’ve constantly been very over our budgeted number, which is a lot more comfortable than being scraping by, which we were last year, like one or two [students] above. Which is sad to say that they’re numbers but . . . otherwise you’re shut down. (Operations Manager, Meade Elementary)

At Robinson School’s board meeting, a PowerPoint slide read as follows: “Sustainability = Student Enrollment = Minimum Foundation Program,” referring to the state’s per-pupil financing scheme. In response to competitive pressures, school leaders were compelled to attract and retain students at their school. School leaders were thus aware of the link between their enrollment numbers and the funding they received.

 

Buffering Competition Through School Differentiation: Developing a Niche or Focus

Schools specialized to meet perceived needs or preferences, whether academic or nonacademic, often creating new institutions or new programs within the school. Schools developed product-based (Betts & Loveless, 2005) or geographical (Lubienski et al., 2009) niches, focusing on a particular neighborhood or area, despite a simultaneous pressure to mimic successful organizations (Lubienski, 2003). Such strategies could buffer schools against competition. Few schools that had niche programs experienced high competition, and several were in the process of developing niches as a response to competition or perhaps as a way of avoiding it. Niche programs may provide parents with more choices and may result in better matches between students and schools, but niche programs do not necessarily aim to improve educational quality.

 Academic Niches.

Six schools developed, or were in the process of developing, niche academic programs to attract students. In some cases, these included high-caliber students who would be screened prior to admission. Schools that added niche academic programs to their existing offerings were described earlier; here, I focus on those that differentiated their entire school. One school leader, when asked how she competed for students, pointed to her application to become an International Baccalaureate (IB) school: “I really think this whole notion of IB is big, and that’s probably the key.” A press release on its website reported that it was the first IB school in the city, and the principal said, “Presently there are seven high schools and middle schools offering IB programs in Louisiana, but no other elementary schools.” This was also an academic strategy, but played a crucial role in differentiating the school from others.

Schools also adopted, or were in the process of adopting, specialized language or arts programs. One of the schools had a language-immersion program, and a school leader described the relatively low competition her school experienced because of the specialized program: “I have a French immersion program, so there’s a little slice of the pie out there for French.” Even among the French-language schools, there was some differentiation. According to the principal, as she referred to one of the other schools, “Their

French program, for example, is the European curriculum. Ours is Louisiana curriculum.” A second school in the sample also had an immersion program and referred to itself as the “only multilingual, full language-immersion school in the state of Louisiana.” When asked what strategies she used to make her school more competitive, one principal reported pursuing a state-level arts program certification to integrate arts into the curriculum, which would make it the “first school in the New Orleans area” to receive this certification.

To attract students, some schools were developing specialized programs and even becoming certified in them. Although some of these drew “gifted” or otherwise already high-performing students, other programs reflected different philosophies of academic excellence, such as the arts-integration and the language immersion programs.

 Other Niches.

In addition to academic niches, schools also differentiated themselves by the neighborhoods or populations they served. One stand-alone school, which was in the process of growing into a CMO, took over another school in an area where there was a low concentration of schools. In that way, it sought a geographical niche:

There has historically been a dearth of great schools in the city but most specifically and additionally in the [neighborhood name] community . . . The [neighborhood] is, in my mind, is just often forgotten. So, as a board, we really think our success as a school, we can just lend some help to building more great schools in the [area].

One school identified a gender niche, offering same-sex education, as a selling point for parents. The principal described this niche program:

I can’t say I know of any urban male public schools in the state—we’re one of a few if not the only school like that in the state. There’s definitely a niche for it, obviously. You get the kids typically that are behavior problems from other schools . . . We’ve been fortunate in that because there is such a need for this school that through the years our numbers have drastically increased.

Another school leader received assigned students who had been expelled from other schools due to behavioral issues, and although she still recruited “choice” students, she also ensured a certain level of enrollment from the authorizer because of her school’s niche.

One school leader developed the niche for her school based on data she had access to while working for the RSD, which showed that there was a specific overage population in the city that did not receive adequate educational services:

When I wrote the charter, I was working for RSD . . . and I was able to access the database . . . There were 1,728 students that qualified for the school. So, yeah, definitely the need was there. As she said about her competitors,

There’s only one other choice because my population is a specific population. They are . . . at least two years behind in grade level. So a lot of my students, other people won’t take, because they’re 19, 20, 21 [years old], they’ve been incarcerated, they’ve had babies, they have all these issues, and we try to work with them.

The niche her school occupied seemed to buffer her from competition. Because of the specific population she served, she only had one competitor.

 Extracurricular Activities and Student Services.

Eleven out of the 30 schools mentioned extracurricular activities to recruit or retain students, usually as a way of differentiating their school from others. One school, for example, viewed other schools that offered athletics programs as competitors, and when the school had to make severe cuts because of a budget shortfall caused by low enrollment, athletics were spared because they were believed to be key to attracting and retaining students in the school. The principal said of the board, “They know that in order for us to keep these kids we really have to have a strong athletic presence.” These extracurricular offerings were essential to the school’s competitiveness and meant allocating funds to non-academic programs that were deemed successful for recruiting students. Similarly, alternative schools were especially concerned that their exclusive focus on academics was deterring students. One alternative school brought in career and technical education programs and culinary arts to attract more families. Two other schools believed that their lack of certain extracurricular activities, such as a marching band, limited their ability to compete.

Overall, 17 out of 30 schools offered some kind of niche program or extracurricular activity that they believed helped to attract parents or limit competition. This finding complements research on parents’ preferences for extracurricular programs when selecting schools in New Orleans (Harris, Larsen, & Zimmerman, 2015).

The motivation for adopting these niche programs might go beyond competing with other schools or serving a specialized population; they might derive from a belief that these programs were better for teaching and learning, and would ultimately improve academics. Indeed, as stated earlier, these strategies are not meant to be mutually exclusive, and seeking a niche should not be viewed as an entirely non-academic strategy.

However, when leaders discussed their schools’ focuses or themes, they described them primarily as a preemptive response to competition, focusing on the novelty and the uniqueness of the program to attract a certain population to their schools. Because the principals understood them as differentiation strategies, they have been classified as such, although many of the programs likely had academic merit as well.

 “Glossification” and Marketing

Marketing strategies were by far the most common response to competition. Twenty-five out of 30 schools used some kind of marketing strategy. Schools most often responded to the pressure to attract and retain students by marketing programs and services that the school already offered. School leaders articulated programs and strategies they were using to improve the school, perhaps resulting in better communication with parents even when no change or improvement in the school had been made. Schools used a range of marketing strategies, including signs, billboards, and bus stop ads (8 schools); flyers and mailings sent to parents’ homes, placed in church bulletins, or handed out in grocery stores (11 schools); home visits (7 schools); parent incentives for referrals (5 schools); bags, T-shirts, and other items with logos (4 schools); print and radio ads (8 schools); partnerships with child care centers or supermarkets (8 schools); work with local celebrities (2 schools); attendance at school fairs hosted by the district or local organizations (13 schools); and open houses and other events at the school (8 schools).

As marketing became necessary to attract and retain children, schools appeared to pursue more sophisticated branding strategies. As Gewirtz et al. (1995) find, the introduction of market forces creates a cultural transformation in education, where surface appearances and images are increasingly important, what they call a “glossification” of schools. For charter schools especially, managing one’s brand was important. Two schools that were transitioning into CMOs were investing in branding and marketing. At a board meeting, there was a presentation from a consulting group that worked with public organizations in New Orleans to help them develop a marketing campaign; its mission was to develop “strategies to make schools competitive in the marketplace.” Because the CMO’s two schools existed in different locations, with different histories, and because the CMO was hoping to take over another school in the future, it was important for them to establish name recognition and a coherent message. The other school that was expanding to become a network of two schools also focused on “rebranding” as a CMO rather than a stand-alone charter. At a board meeting I attended, they discussed how they were in the process of designing a new logo and rebranding the website. Finally, another school that was part of a CMO was obtaining a trademark for their school’s brand “to protect and preserve, to the extent possible, the integrity of Stone School in the media” (Board member).

 Creaming” and “Cropping”: Screening and Selecting Students

In addition to formal marketing efforts, schools recruited or screened students informally. In openenrollment schools, which were the majority of schools in New Orleans, screening and selection practices were not permitted. Most schools were expected to accept all students who applied and were supposed to hold a lottery if they had more applications than slots available. Ten out of 30 schools engaged in some kind of selection process, whether allowed to or not. Only one school in the sample had explicit selective-admissions criteria, but one of the other schools required language tests for placement after the first grade because of its immersion program. No other schools were allowed to have admissions criteria, yet eight of these “fully open-enrollment” schools reported engaging in some kind of selection process.

Some leaders at schools that were underenrolled decided not to advertise open spaces to maintain control over their student body. These schools, with available seats midyear, chose to forgo additional funds so as to not recruit the types of students who have been out of school for weeks or who have been kicked out of other schools. Schools thus used the act of not engaging in marketing as a form of student selection. One principal identified the “double-edged sword” with regard to advertising openings at his school and screening out students:

And now for us that battle is unique because we know the more we advertise and push the fact that we have openings, the more less-capable students we get. So yeah, I’m about 100 kids below what we were targeting, but it’s a double-edged sword. Do I want a hundred kids in the building who aren’t in school?

The year of the study was one with high stakes for this charter school, as test scores would determine the renewal of its charter. The school leader preferred to be under-enrolled than recruit the “wrong” type of student, a pattern also found by Lubienski (2005) in Detroit, where districts and neighborhoods with declining enrollments and available seats preferred to remain empty or recruit students from the suburbs rather than open seats to local families.

Schools also had informal contact with affluent parents seeking placement. In some cases, prominent leaders in the city facilitated such relationships. For example, in an interview with a school board member, he described an informal school-assignment mechanism:

There’s no way to figure out where there are spots so usually what happens is people just call. They should call the school system, and they do, but it’s just not the way people are in New Orleans. People call people they know.

He went on to describe how an acquaintance reached out to him:

So he calls and I was like: forget about Schelling, there’s no slots there, but let me check around with the school leaders” . . . It’s impractical and as crazy as it sounds, there is no list. Part of it is that nobody wants to give up that information in a real-time format and part of it is that everybody thinks that they’re going to get screwed somehow.

Other schools obtained this real-time information through informal relationships with schools that were closing or selective-admissions schools that were oversubscribed. The informal assignment of students, in which schools kept information on empty seats to themselves, gave schools much more control over which students to accept and served as a form of selection.

One school asked parents who the principal “believed epitomized an Arrows Prep parent” to bring like- minded parents to a special, inviteonly school night:

We’ve done invite-only open houses, where we target specific types of parents, and we say, “Hey, we really love you as a parent and we want you to bring another parent who’s like you.” . . . So I got a couple of parents that way.

This targeted recruitment of “specific types of parents” could also be viewed as a form of selection, as the school tries to attract certain types of students. The principal at another school said that the school “is not for everyone,” despite the fact that it was open enrollment. Another principal was working to expand their gifted programs to attract higher-performing students. Another open-enrollment school screened out midyear transfers, but made exceptions for some:

We just had a parent come this morning trying to get a kid in. I said, “I’m sorry, you can’t do that. I don’t have any way of knowing what the kid’s been doing for the last couple of months” . . . Now, I do have two coming in tomorrow from LaPlace that flooded during Isaac so of course I need to look at them because they lost their homes . . . But you just changing schools locally here in New Orleans, I’m a little leery about why you would be doing that. But hey, you’re a great kid, I’ll look at it! [laughter]

Another open-enrollment school that was set to join the OneApp described how it would affect their selection processes because they would no longer be able to screen families:

On OneApp, the children choose you. You don’t have that communication and dialogue that we had. Previously, we were able to do interviews and just see if the family fit for our institution . . . Some students may want to come for name, but will not be prepared for the expectations of the school.

She also described how parents who were not “ready to step up to the plate” or prepared for the school’s “high expectations” would usually transfer out a form of selection through attrition. Another school acknowledged that the fact that they did not provide transportation could be viewed as a form of selection.

One school continued to reach out to families that might not have thought that the school was an option for them, even when the school was oversubscribed and had a long waitlist:

Though we don’t have any problem getting applicants, we feel a moral obligation to go out and make sure we’re reaching everyone. That we’re not overlooking families who just hear “Stone School” and think “that’s not available to me.”

This principal recognized that stopping recruitment efforts when there were enough students might limit the applicant pool to families who already had access to information resources through their networks or other means. She continued to market selectively to recruit a more diverse student body.

When schools reported selecting students, they seemed to view it not as a choice but as a necessity to survive. In most cases, principals reported such practices matter-of-factly. Schools in New Orleans are responding to market pressures, but they are also responding to a “different set of incentives” (Lubienski, 2005), including balancing the accountability pressures to improve test scores with the need to enroll more students. Similar to the school districts that were unwilling to market their schools to local families in Detroit, some schools in New Orleans preferred to remain under-enrolled than to attract students who might hurt their test scores. The fact that school leaders shared these practices with me suggests that they did not see them as problematic. Rather, they viewed these practices as just part of their effort to create a coherent school culture or as a necessity for survival in a market-based environment.

 Conditions Mediating School Leaders’ Strategies

Although previous studies have documented similar responses to competition in other contexts, this study also examines the conditions under which schools pursue particular strategies. Schools’ strategies in the competitive market differed depending on the amount of competition they perceived and their position in the market hierarchy, conditions that mediated the particular strategies they adopted in response to competitive pressure.Schools with high status or prestige, based on how other schools perceived them, adopted different strategies compared with low-status schools, yet all but one school engaged in some form of competitive behavior. I first discuss how a school’s perceptions of competition and position in the market hierarchy mediated its strategies. Then I discuss other school conditions that influenced schools’ strategic responses to competition or interacted with competition more broadly, providing schools with either a competitive advantage or disadvantage.

Perception of Competition Influences Strategic Actions

Perceptions of competition can influence strategic actions (Levacic, 2004), even more than objective measures of competition. The extent to which school leaders in New Orleans perceived competition, based on the number of competitors they listed on a survey, was related to their strategies. Schools experiencing high competition more frequently adopted academic, extracurricular, and marketing strategies, although some differences were not very large. Schools experiencing low and moderate competition more often engaged in operational changes, adopted niche programs, or screened and selected students. This might seem counterintuitive schools that experience low competitive pressure might be less inclined to form niches or select students, but it is important to remember that these relationships are bidirectional. Schools with niches might also feel less competition as a result of carving out a protected slice of the market. Similarly, schools that engage in selection practices may perceive less competition because they have greater control over their student enrollment, or it may be that schools that perceive less competition are oversubscribed and thus are able to selectively admit students without incurring loss of revenue.

At the other extreme, the one school that felt no competition did not engage in any competitive strategies. The leader reported that he did not compete with other schools because his school was slated for closure in the coming year, and only students who were already enrolled at the site would continue for the 2012–2013 year:

“The kids that have to go here, go here. And that’s just being honest. I don’t think that kids search out and say ‘I’m going to Frisch.’”

School Status in the Market Hierarchy Influences Strategic Action

How a school was perceived by other schools was also associated with specific strategies. Schools that were viewed as a competitor by many other schools were considered “high status” or popular (Wasserman & Faust, 1994). High-status schools engaged in operational strategies less frequently than other schools (see Figure 3). It may be that operational effectiveness makes high-status schools natural competitors. In addition, high-status schools were more likely to engage in student selection. Schools that selectively enroll students, either by design or by cream skimming even when district policies do not allow them to, may be viewed as competitors more often because other principals believe that selective schools recruit away strong students from other schools and send back lower performing students. For example, one principal at a low-status school believed that the reason she received students midyear, just before testing, when she “had no opportunity to even touch the child,” was because other schools were “kicking children out who have been problems all year long” (Principal, Simon School).

Other Contextual Factors Influencing the Nature of Competition

School leaders also described several other factors, including academics, charter networks, and facilities, that constrained or enabled their adoption of particular strategic responses.

Charter Networks.

School leaders perceived that competition for students occurred on an uneven playing field, and reported that charter networks seemed to have a competitive advantage in the marketplace. Stand-alone schools and direct-run schools, in particular, believed it was difficult to compete with what they referred to as “brandname” schools with seemingly larger advertising budgets and resources. Stand-alone charters were more likely to engage in academic, operational, and niche strategies than either direct-run schools or those in networks. It is not surprising that stand-alone charter schools adopted niches more frequently, because that is one of the primary goals of charter schools (Lubienski, 2003).

At the same time, larger CMOs that aim to grow to scale and serve a large portion of the student population might not adopt particular niche programs. Although almost all schools engaged in some kind of marketing, with no major differences across school types (e.g., charter, direct-run), schools differed in the sophistication and scope of their marketing and branding campaigns, as evidenced in the qualitative data. For example, the principal at Engels Elementary, a direct-run school, said he used community organizations “to market in areas that we’re not able to market with billboards and stuff like that,” referring to billboards placed by several of the larger charter networks. Other schools were also unable to advertise as much as they would like because of budget constraints. Yet, schools that were part of CMOs often relied on the network to create flyers or send representatives to fairs. Networks A and C had billboards and bus ads, and Network A helped to raise funds and allocate students at the network level, removing that burden from the individual school. Network B’s central office created flyers for the schools, although each school conducted its own, targeted outreach.

CMOs appear to benefit from private philanthropic support. Overall, private contributions provide approximately US$272 to US$407 per pupil, or about 3% of total revenues, but for some charter networks, these figures can be as high as 29% (Cowen Institute, 2009). CMOs were able to support the funding of professional marketing and branding campaigns to promote the charter network overall, if not individual schools.

Facilities.

Unlike organizations in the private sector, schools usually did not have control over their school sites, because there was a master plan at the district level to allocate facilities. Therefore, schools were unable to respond to competition by improving their facilities, but they did note that new facilities provided a competitive advantage, whereas temporary facilities provided a disadvantage overall. There were some differences between schools with temporary, permanent (but old), and new facilities. Schools with temporary facilities more often engaged in operational strategies, perhaps as part of an effort to secure additional space through partnerships (one school partnered with a cultural center to use additional space, for example) or expansion, by taking over other schools, for example. They also more often engaged in niche strategies and marketing strategies. Schools in new facilities were less likely to engage in many strategies, including operations, niche, selection, and marketing. In fact, one school’s new building received so much press coverage that the principal no longer advertised openings.

School leaders also expressed a general view that new facilities were important for attracting parents and for meeting parental demand with sufficient space. New facilities attracted parents not only because they were “gorgeous,” as one principal said of hers, but because they also signaled to parents that the school could offer more services and extracurricular activities, which also made them more competitive: “Given the facility,

I think parents definitely want to come because of that.” She went on to say that they could “provide more opportunities to their students,” in the form of electives and other activities.

School leaders also reported that lack of sufficient space or low-quality facilities diminished their ability to recruit more students. One principal of a direct-run school described how his lack of adequate facilities affected what he could offer to parents:

I went to Meade Charter School just yesterday for a meeting and their new building is just beautiful. A brand new building. Beautiful. And I think that’s where the other part of competition kind of fades for us because we don’t have the newer building . . . that’s afforded some of the charters. And it does kind of wear on what you can offer to parents. (Prescott Elementary)

For schools already in high demand, space constraints prevented their expansion. Five schools reported this as the major reason they could not enroll more students. Schools with independent funding were even considering building their own sites; others rented space from colleges, cultural centers, and churches. Location uncertainty made it harder to compete. For example, one concerned board member at Stone said, “Not having a location weighs heavily on parents’ decisions for enrollment.” School leaders believed that facilities factored into parents’ decisions; schools with new facilities attracted parents, whereas schools lacking new facilities believed this partially explained their inability to compete.

Conclusion

Competition placed pressure on schools, especially those that were low performing or underenrolled. School leaders engaged in a number of strategies owing to the competition. Ten schools reported efforts to improve academic performance to increase student enrollment, attract parents, or compete with other schools. Many more schools (n = 25) used marketing strategies. Some schools reported improving their operations in response to competitive pressures, which could potentially lead to a more efficient allocation of resources. Schools also developed niches, which might provide better opportunities and stronger matches between students’ needs and school offerings. However, this is certainly different from the traditional economic view of a “rising tide lifting all boats,” whereby educational improvement occurs “through large numbers of schools competing to produce a homogenous product” (Betts & Loveless, 2005, p. 37). Rather than entering an already crowded marketplace, these school leaders carved out a slice of that market, preempting or avoiding competition.

Although competition is expected to improve schools, leaders’ responses to market pressures were not always efficient or equitable. Alongside their efforts to improve academics and operations, schools also engaged in practices that were superficial, in the case of marketing, or inequitable, in the case of screening and selecting students. Although marketing may provide better information to parents, it does not represent a substantive change to school programming or operations (Bagley, 2006). Furthermore, some marketing and selection practices segmented the market further, in ways that could exacerbate inequities by limiting educational opportunities for certain families. For example, some schools targeted children who were already high performing and found ways to circumvent the centralized assignment process, either to save slots for such students or to prevent students who might be struggling from enrolling. Most charter schools in New Orleans were not permitted to enroll students outside a lottery system, yet several did. Others were required by the OneApp system to report available seats to the central office in real time, but did not. Such practices actually limit parents’ choices. Even if schools in New Orleans on average are improving, there are concerns that not all students have equal access to better schools. Some evidence suggests that mobility patterns in New Orleans are consistent with a segmented market, with low-achieving students switching to low-performing schools and high-achieving students transferring to highperforming schools (Welsh, Duque, & McEachin, in press), yet whether this has worsened or improved since before Katrina remains unknown.

These findings, although particular to New Orleans, have important implications for policy, especially for the many other districts that have adopted, or have considered adopting, similar reforms. These findings suggest areas in which the district could play a role to ensure a fairer marketplace, mitigating some of its adverse effects. Central-assignment programs, such as the OneApp, may reduce inequities in access, by not leaving admissions entirely to schools, and may also simplify the process for families. However, districts can also provide better information and closer oversight to ensure that families are able to access schools they need. Districts might ensure that non-marketing information, such as thirdparty reports of school performance and program offerings, is readily available to parents to make informed decisions, and they might target that information to low-income parents to have greater impact (Hastings & Weinstein, 2008). Districts might also more carefully monitor within-year transfers, ensuring that empty seats are filled through the central office at all times. To some degree, these suggestions echo those of advocates of portfolio-management models, who argue that even in systems of choice, districts have an important role to play (Bulkley, Levin, & Henig, 2010; Lake & Hill, 2009).

This study also makes several contributions to the literature. First, this study contributes to our understanding of how market-based reforms operate in the public sector. In particular, I build on existing literature that examines whether competition improves student outcomes (e.g., Hoxby, 2002; Ni, 2009; Zimmer & Buddin, 2005) to explore the mechanisms by which that might occur. I find that schools draw from a broad range of strategies in responding to competition, reflecting findings about competition in the United Kingdom (Woods et al., 1998). Like other researchers, I find marketing to be the most common competitive strategy (Gewirtz et al., 1995; Kasman & Loeb, 2013; Lubienski, 2007).

I also document the various selection strategies schools used, building on prior work (Jennings, 2010; Lubienski et al., 2009; Welner, 2013), and noting new strategies, such as “not marketing” as a form of selection. Second, this study contributes to theory by highlighting the role that social dimensions play when they interact with market pressures. For example, the informal assignment of students occurred via school leaders’ social networks, reflecting findings in other studies that have shown how networks moderate competition (e.g., Jennings, 2010). School leaders’ position in the marketplace, whom they view as competitors, and their status based on competition, charter network, and school performance, influenced the strategies that they used in a competitive environment. Schools scanned the environment and mimicked each other (Lubienski, 2003; Woods et al., 1998), in the case of marketing, whereas others differentiated themselves and sought a niche (e.g., White, 1981). In fact, many of the academic strategies were niche strategies; many schools tried to offer something unique or different from their competitors. This suggests it is important to look beyond “competitive effects” to examine the process of competition, including the specific strategies schools adopt, and how social and cognitive factors play a role. Otherwise, researchers and Policy makers may miss important mechanisms that explain how and why competition influences student outcomes, for better or worse, and miss opportunities for district intervention to mitigate any negative effects of competition. This analysis suggests several directions for further research. Research in other settings is needed. New Orleans is a “critical” case that helps to illuminate the process of competition, but it is necessary to examine how school leaders in districts with more moderate school-choice policies compete. Because marketing was so common, further research might examine the extent to which programs highlighted in marketing materials actually correspond to those within schools. For example, are schools that market themselves as arts-integrated actually incorporating the arts in academic classes? Much of the research on competition to date has examined the effects of competition on student achievement, but we know little about how competition affects equity and diversity in schools. This study shows that cream-skimming practices occur, but future research should systematically examine whether students are being counseled out and to what extent they are being selected (e.g., Zimmer & Guarino, 2013). In addition to examining the extent to which these findings are similar to other districts at various stages of marketization, it would also be worthwhile to examine the different ways in which districts and states regulate market-based reforms with different assignment policies and incentive structures. This could help to design a choice system that is truly accessible and equitable.

Source:  jabbar every kid is money

Author

Huriya Jabbar is an assistant professor in the Department of Educational Administration at the University of Texas at Austin, and a research associate at the Education Research Alliance–New Orleans at Tulane University. She studies the social and political dimensions of privatization and market-based reforms in education.

Comparte este contenido:

UNESCO: Por qué es importante la educación integral en sexualidad

UNESCO/ 20 de febrero de 2018/ Fuente: https://es.unesco.org

¿Sabía usted que a nivel mundial solo un 34% de los jóvenes puede dar prueba de un conocimiento preciso sobre la prevención y la transmisión del VIH? ¿Que en algunas partes del mundo dos de cada tres niñas no tienen idea de lo que les estaba pasando cuando tuvieron su primera menstruación? Aquí algunos motivos por los que es urgente proponer una educación integral y de calidad en sexualidad (EIS).

Este mes, la UNESCO publicó una edición revisada de las Orientaciones técnicas internacionales sobre educación en sexualidad  que promueve la educación sexual integral de calidad, así como como la igualdad de género, y empodera a niños y jóvenes para que lleven una vida sana, segura y productiva.

¿Qué es la educación integral en sexualidad (EIS)?

La educación integral en sexualidad es un proceso de enseñanza y aprendizaje basado en planes de estudios que versa sobre los aspectos cognitivos, psicológicos, físicos y sociales de la sexualidad. Su propósito es dotar a los niños y jóvenes de conocimientos basados en datos empíricos, habilidades, actitudes y valores que los empoderarán para disfrutar de salud, bienestar y dignidad; entablar relaciones sociales y sexuales basadas en el respeto; analizar cómo sus decisiones afectan su propio bienestar y el de otras personas; y comprender cómo proteger sus derechos a lo largo de su vida y velar por ellos.

¿Por qué los jóvenes necesitan recibir la educación integral en sexualidad?

Demasiados jóvenes reciben información confusa y contradictoria sobre las relaciones y el sexo a medida que hacen la transición de la niñez a la edad adulta. Ello ha conducido a un aumento de la demanda por parte de los jóvenes de información confiable que los prepare para llevar una vida segura, productiva y satisfactoria. Correctamente enseñada, la educación integral en sexualidad responde a esta demanda, empoderando a los jóvenes para que tomen decisiones fundamentadas en lo que respecta a las relaciones y la sexualidad, ayudándolos a desenvolverse en un mundo donde la violencia y las desigualdades basadas en el género, los embarazos precoces y no deseados, y el VIH y otras infecciones de transmisión sexual (ITS) continúan planteando graves riesgos para su salud y bienestar. Asimismo, una educación integral de calidad en sexualidad deficiente o inexistente, adaptada a la edad y a la etapa de su desarrollo, expone a los niños y jóvenes a una situación de vulnerabilidad frente a las conductas sexuales negativas y a la explotación sexual.

La educación integral en sexualidad desempeña un papel esencial en la salud y el bienestar de los niños y jóvenes. Al aplicar un enfoque basado en los educandos no sólo proporciona a los niños y jóvenes, progresivamente y en función de su edad, una educación basada en los derechos humanos, la igualdad de género, las relaciones, la reproducción, el comportamiento sexual de riesgo y la prevención de enfermedades desde una perspectiva positiva, poniendo de relieve valores tales como el respeto, la inclusión, la no discriminación, la igualdad, la empatía, la responsabilidad y la reciprocidad.

¿Qué demuestran los datos sobre la educación integral en sexualidad?

Existen pruebas significativas del impacto de la educación en sexualidad sobre el comportamiento sexual y la salud. Los datos ponen de relieve que:

  • La educación en sexualidad tiene efectos positivos, entre ellos un aumento del conocimiento de los jóvenes y una mejora de su actitud en lo que respecta a la salud y los comportamientos sexuales y reproductivos.
  • La educación en sexualidad, tanto en la escuela como fuera de ella, no aumenta la actividad sexual, el comportamiento sexual de riesgo o los índices de ITS y VIH.
  • Se ha demostrado que los programas que promueven únicamente la abstinencia no tienen ningún efecto en el retraso de la iniciación sexual ni en la reducción de la frecuencia de las relaciones sexuales o el número de parejas sexuales, mientras que los programas que combinan el retraso de la actividad sexual con el uso de preservativos u otros métodos anticonceptivos resultan eficaces.
  • Los programas “centrados en el género” tienen una eficacia considerablemente superior a la de los programas que no integran consideraciones de género a la hora de alcanzar resultados en materia de salud como la reducción de los índices de embarazo no deseados o de ITS.
  • La educación en sexualidad logra mejores resultados cuando los programas escolares se complementan con la participación de padres y docentes, de los institutos pedagógicos y los servicios de salud pensados para los jóvenes.

¿Por qué son necesarias las Orientaciones técnicas sobre educación en sexualidad?

Los países reconocen cada vez más la importancia de dotar a los jóvenes de los conocimientos y las habilidades que necesitan para tomar decisiones responsables con sus vidas. La educación integral en sexualidad empodera a los jóvenes al mejorar sus capacidades de análisis, de comunicación y otras capacidades útiles para la vida con miras a garantizar la salud y el bienestar en términos de sexualidad, derechos humanos, valores, relaciones sanas y respetuosas, normas culturales y sociales, igualdad de sexos, no discriminación, conducta sexual, violencia y violencia de género, consentimiento, abuso sexual y prácticas negativas.

¿Cuáles son las novedades en las Orientaciones?

La primera edición de las Orientaciones técnicas internacionales publicada en 2009 permitió, ante todo, integrar la educación en sexualidad en el marco de las respuestas al VIH. No obstante, aunque la prevención del VIH sigue siendo importante, los hechos constatados y la práctica demuestran que la pertinencia de la educación en sexualidad se aplica también a otros problemas no sólo relacionados con la salud sexual y reproductiva de los jóvenes, sino también con su bienestar general y desarrollo personal.

La edición revisada de las Orientaciones presenta a la sexualidad desde una perspectiva positiva, al reconocer que la sexualidad integral significa mucho más que una enseñanza sobre la reproducción, los riesgos y las enfermedades. Dicha edición reafirma el lugar que ocupa la educación sexual en el marco de los derechos humanos y la igualdad de género. Asimismo, refleja el aporte de la educación sexual en materia de salud sexual y reproductiva, así como el cumplimiento de los objetivos de la Agenda 2030 en lo relativo a la salud y al bienestar, a la calidad y a la educación inclusiva, la igualdad de género y el empoderamiento de las mujeres y las niñas.

Fuente de la Guía:

https://es.unesco.org/news/que-es-importante-educacion-integral-sexualidad

Comparte este contenido:
Page 30 of 106
1 28 29 30 31 32 106