分权管理与学校领导质量

D. Laing, Steven G. Rivkin, Jeffrey C. Schiman, Jason Ward
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引用次数: 9

摘要

为了应对对学校的普遍不满,1988年《芝加哥学校改革法案》通过成立选举产生的地方学校委员会(LSCs)来分散学校管理,负责校长招聘、评估、合同续签以及其他管理职能。随后的立法概述了地区可以从地方自治委员会收回权力的情况,从而限制了地方控制。本文研究了在决策权所在地存在不确定性的制度下,委托人效力的分配。我们首先基于方差分析方法和主固定效应的估计建立了主有效性显著变化的存在。教师调查回应支持基于主要固定效应的研究结果,尽管方差估计的分析幅度要小得多,这表明未观察到的冲击夸大了许多现有的主要有效性方差估计。接下来,我们将考虑LSC行为中导致变异的潜在差异。继Aghion和Tirole(1997)之后,我们开发了一个模型,突出了正式权威和实际权威之间的紧张关系,并纳入了LSC能力和激励机制的潜在差异,以最大限度地提高学校质量。通过使用管理能力和激励的代理,我们发现了与理论基本一致的证据,表明具有更高管理能力和更强激励以提高学校质量的LSCs在合同结束后在主要有效性方面获得了更大的收益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decentralized Governance and the Quality of School Leadership
In response to widespread dissatisfaction with the schools, the 1988 Chicago School Reform Act decentralized school governance by forming elected local school councils (LSCs) responsible for principal hiring, evaluation, and contract renewal as well as other management functions. Subsequent legislation outlined circumstances in which the district could reclaim authority from the LSC, thereby limiting local control. This paper investigates the distribution of principal effectiveness under a system in which there is uncertainty over the locus of decision-making authority. We first establish the presence of significant variation in principal effectiveness based on both an analysis of variance approach and the estimation of principal fixed effects. Teacher survey responses support the findings based on the principal fixed effects, though the much smaller magnitude of the analysis of variance estimates suggest that unobserved shocks inflate many existing estimates of the variance in principal effectiveness. We next consider potential differences in LSC behavior that contribute to the variation. Following Aghion and Tirole (1997) we develop a model that highlights the tensions between formal and real authority and incorporates potential differences in LSC capacity and incentives to maximize school quality. Using proxies for managerial capacity and incentives we find evidence largely consistent with the theory, showing that LSCs with higher management capacity and stronger incentives to raise school quality experience larger gains in principal effectiveness following the end of contracts.
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