Wir verwenden Cookies und Analyse-Tools, um die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Internet-Seite zu verbessern und für Marketingzwecke. Wenn Sie fortfahren, diese Seite zu verwenden, nehmen wir an, dass Sie damit einverstanden sind. Zur Datenschutzerklärung.
Mayoral Control of the New York City Schools
Details
This is a book about the ambitious reform strategy known as mayoral control ini- ated to transform the dysfunctional system of urban education in the United States. I use the term dysfunctional to refer to the inability of urban school districts over the past 50 years to reduce the learning gap between poor students and their middle class peers, despite a host of reform efforts including desegregation, compensatory programs, and decentralization. Since the mid-1990s, the idea of mayoral control has generated considerable interest. Several large cities have introduced it such as Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Baltimore, and Washington (Henig and Rich 2004; Wong et al. 2007). Although the latter have completed a quantitative study of mayoral control's impact on student performance in over 100 cities, a case study of the New York experience nevertheless illuminates the capacity of this tool for transforming urban education. Because of the size of the NYC system roughly 1.2 million students and its economic, social, and ethnic diversity, it faces the myriad problems of urban edu- tion writ large that impede efforts to implement change in these schools.
Assesses the first three years of Mayor Bloomberg's radical overhaul of the NYC schools The analysis of this governance asks the question: To what extent can the business management paradigm be transferred to search a public section agency?
Klappentext
The New York City public school system has fundamentally changed its governance four times during the past forty years. It moved in 1970 from a highly centralized bureaucracy to a more community-based decentralized system, both of which were independent of the mayor. In 2002 under mayoral control, the system again centralized and then in 2007 decentralized. In each instance, New York has been an example (for good and bad) that many other large cities follow.
The author of this timely work presents an analysis of the political and organizational dynamics of Mayor Bloomberg's and Chancellor Klein's new mode of governance and of how their management style has shaped its design and implementation. The focus is the first phase of mayoral control (2003 until the fall of 2007). The book provides a unique opportunity to assess mayoral control of the largest public school system in the United States, and the results have ramifications for other large cities that have instituted mayoral control or are exploring the idea. The stimulus for the change to mayoral control comes from big city mayors, business leaders, state and city appointed and elected officials, concerned about how the schools have contributed to the U.S. economy's declining global competitiveness and social and economic problems of inner cities.
Inhalt
Why Past Reforms Have Not Worked.- Historical Context 1: Cycles of Centralization and Decentralization.- Historical Context 2: Mayoral Governance as an Emerging National Movement.- Analytical Context: A Framework for Assessing Mayoral Governance in New York.- Bloomberg's Emerging Engagement in the New Your City Schools.- Style and Directions of the Transformation.- Structural Components.- Implementation Problems.- Lessons for Mayoral Governance: Critical Issues for the Future.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781441943866
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st edition 2009
- Größe H235mm x B155mm x T8mm
- Jahr 2010
- EAN 9781441943866
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 1441943862
- Veröffentlichung 19.11.2010
- Titel Mayoral Control of the New York City Schools
- Autor David Rogers
- Untertitel Springer Studies in Work and Industry
- Gewicht 213g
- Herausgeber Springer US
- Anzahl Seiten 132
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Sozialwissenschaften, Recht & Wirtschaft