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Education and social change. T ünde Kovacs - Cerovic Serbia, State Secretary for education. Content. A couple of truisms Education in an imperfect context Educational perspective System perspective Parents’ perspective Added value for education policy making
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Education and social change Tünde Kovacs-Cerovic Serbia, State Secretary for education
Content • A couple of truisms • Education in an imperfect context • Educational perspective • System perspective • Parents’ perspective • Added value for education policy making • Use some data on Serbia, some on the SEE region – no PISA
Education policy and society • Education is not an isolated system, it both reflects the societal dynamics and contributes to them • Education has a transformative role – it shapes the future, but in order to shape it in the right way, it needs to be responsive to problems and needs • Equity, quality and efficiency – core elements of education policy and vital for its contribution to social change • Policy makers in SEE face similar challenges – a valuable opportunity for cooperation and mutuallearning
1. Educational perspective • Create the best context for human learning and development • Educationalists try to maximize the frequency of learning and minimize contextual “intrusion” But • School learning and motivation is situated in an imperfect context
Decline of number of students in secondary education Annual average decrease more than 2 % Annual average decrease between 1,5 % and 2 % Annual average decrease between 1% and 1,5% Annual average decrease between 0,5% and 1% Annual average increase between 0 and 0,5%
Projections of decline in secondary school students until 2023/2024
2. System perspective • Education reforms 2001-2004 2008-2011 • Threefold priorities 2008: Equity, Quality, Efficiency
Priorities of education policy Equity = Inclusive education Efficiency = Fiscal decentralization and EIS Quality = quality improvement: educational and social
AREAS OF CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS Outcomes and standards New curricula Quality of teachers (36 ECTS) QA, self-evaluation, external evaluation matura Clearer roles of schools, parents, students Anti-discrimination measures, Violence prevention Capitation formula EIS Extended preschool Inclusion of marginalized groups Individual education plans Roma pedagogical assistants Free secondary edu. Recognition of prior learning
Current moment • Formulating priorities 2008 • Legislative acts 2009 2010 • Implementation from 2010 • Monitoring and fine-tuning 2011 • Long-term strategy development 2012-2020 • Good timing: Independent assessment very important
Current moment • Monitoring and fine-tuning 2011 (equity and quality) • Good timing for reflection: why not easier? • Deeper layers of imperfect context
Imperfect context • Huge system - covers about 20% of the population in the country, but is fragmented into small and dispersed units example of country of 6mil
Imperfect context 2. Perceived as major mechanism for social/economic promotion –high motivation, high incentives
Imperfect context 3. Huge system of human interactions: interests, negotiations, conflicts, clans – all aspects of human nature present
Imperfect context 4. Asymmetric relationships in its core: student-teacher, child-parent, parent-teacher (lack of voice, protectionism)
Imperfect context • Parents excluded (Roma parents even more excluded) – recent OSI study
Rare event • Schools are expected to be • Places of intimateexperience: • Learning • Deep understanding • Motivation • Creativity • Respect • Values • Places of development of the Self-concept: • Self-regulation • Self-efficacy • Self-esteem • Self-description/attribution • Can they easily become that?
Learning can become a really rare event Attended ... Listened ... Heard ... Understood ... Remembered ... Will apply ...
Imperfect context: INTES • Niches of corruption in education can diminish all the reform effects • Education is human capital development • Corruption creates the opposite – waste of human capital
2025 SCHOOL Personal benefits Social benefits regulated teachers textbooks curriculum equitable financing management assessment evaluation Research participatory Development Policies efficient accountable 26
Potential niches • Allocation of resources: • Leakage in money flow • Private use of resources • Ghost teachers • Creativity of deception • Procurement: • construction, • refurbishing, • maintenance, • equipment • school materials • utility bills • Allocation of allowances, stipends, places in dormitories • Decentralized distribution of funds, many transfer steps, • many actors (tracking the funds needed) • BOR financing
Potential niches • Assessing students • Examinations frauds (entry/exit) • Grading • Promotion based on bribes • Selling diplomas • Evaluating institutions • manipulating external evaluations • inspection • Accrediting institutions, programs • Major frauds: cases in Serbia: • Law School University of Kragujevac + Ministry, 2007 • January • Enrolment exam for secondary education, 2008 June • assessment • evaluation
Potential niches teachers • Teacher management: • Hiring/firing • Deployment • Licensing • Promotion • Training • Teachers’ responsibilities distorted: • undue reporting • private tutoring • absenteeism, use of sick leaves • accepting extra fees, gifts • biased grading • New regulations, but still low salaries, • strong teacher unions (case of June 2011 legislation)
Potential niches • Who is managing and overseeing the schools? • Appointment of principals/deans/rectors • Appointment of school boards • selecting the Inspection • Use of information systems: • Withholding information, • changing, manipulating data, • not producing data.. • Accountability to students, parents • Student placements • Manipulating school boards • Manipulating parent councils • Not including students • Major area of protectionism: student placements – each September • School principals PE teachers • management • ethos
3. Parentperspective Imperfect context PARENT PARTICIPATION IN SEE
Teachers’ and parents’ perceptions: Gray area between cooperation and conflict The origin of unsatisfactory teacher-parent communication is perceived to lie within the school who should initiate the collaboration being more responsive to parental and children’s needs (Lawson, 2003)
Parents’ Questionnaire • Based on: • Literature review: • Epstien’s (1987) six dimensions of parental involvement • Green, Walker, Hoover-Dempsey and Sandler (2007) model of the parental involvement process. • Results of focus group discussions in the 10 SEE countries • Results of 2008 cross national study of school principals • Consisting of 3 parts: • Q for mainstream parents (used for all samples) • Q for excluded parents (additional part) • Q for parent representatives (additional part)
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola inicira roditeljski sastanak: Škola inicira individulani sastanak:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola šalje informaciju o detetovom uspehu: Škola šalje informaciju o školskom radu:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola šalje školski informator: Škola inicira volontiranje oko sportskih/kult. aktivnosti:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola inicira volontiranje u razredu/nastavi: Škola inicira volontiranje u biblioteci, dvorištu…:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola konsultuje roditelje oko školskih događaja: Škola konsultuje roditelje oko bezbednosnih odluka:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola konsultuje roditelje oko ekstrakurikularnih odluka: Škola konsultuje roditelje oko finansijskih odluka:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Škola konsultuje roditelje oko organizacije šk rada: Škola konsultuje roditelje oko obrazovnih pitanja:
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Schools do not invite parents(%)
How does parent-school cooperation happen? Schools do not invite parents/cont (%) In Roma sample “never” is around 90%
Parents think their contribution is beneficial Parents think they are capable of contributing
2. How does parent-school cooperation happen? Systematic difference between parents’ and principals’ perception
3. How does parent-school cooperation happen? Problem attributed more to parents than schools. Parents are perceived as motivated and competent to participate
4. Outcomes of parent-school cooperation ? Parents are least satisfied with their possibility of influence