Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative

Over the last five years, with the above colleagues at Curtin University and the University of Sydney, I have examined the changes associated with the Independent Public Schools policy initiative in Western Australia. This research has in part involved comparative policy analysis which has placed th...

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Main Authors: Fitzgerald, Scott, McGrath-Champ, Susan, Wilson, Rachel, Stacey, Meghan, Rainnie, Al, Parding, Karolina
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Legislative Assembly, Parliament of Western Australia 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.parliament.wa.gov.au/Parliament/commit.nsf/luInquiryPublicSubmissions/4B96A0397DA4400748257FB80026BC50/$file/18.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80015
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author Fitzgerald, Scott
McGrath-Champ, Susan
Wilson, Rachel
Stacey, Meghan
Rainnie, Al
Parding, Karolina
author_facet Fitzgerald, Scott
McGrath-Champ, Susan
Wilson, Rachel
Stacey, Meghan
Rainnie, Al
Parding, Karolina
author_sort Fitzgerald, Scott
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Over the last five years, with the above colleagues at Curtin University and the University of Sydney, I have examined the changes associated with the Independent Public Schools policy initiative in Western Australia. This research has in part involved comparative policy analysis which has placed the IPS initiative within a broader history of attempts by governments to devolve responsibility and decision making through the establishment of local school ‘autonomy’ or ‘self-managing schools’. Despite a very mixed record of effects, school autonomy has been embraced widely by western nations, including British ‘Academy’ schools, USA ‘Charter’ schools, and a surge of ‘independent’ schools, such as in Sweden. In Australia, such government devolution policies have included Better Schools in Western Australia (1987) Schools Renewal in New South Wales (1989) and Schools of the Future in Victoria (1993). For all the initial discussion of the novelty of the IPS policy, and all its focus on community and school empowerment as opposed to choice, competition and efficiency, the IPS initiative is part of this broader reform agenda to transform public education. In reviewing this experience of the push towards self-managing schools within Australia and internationally we found that what occurs through such policies is a shift of risk to families and an abrogation of responsibility on behalf of government to operate and fund an inclusive and equitable public education system (Fitzgerald and Rainnie 2011; Fitzgerald and Rainnie 2012). As I note below, research has consistently shown, at best, a very tenuous link between school autonomy and improved student outcomes across public education systems.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-800152020-08-11T07:15:41Z Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative Fitzgerald, Scott McGrath-Champ, Susan Wilson, Rachel Stacey, Meghan Rainnie, Al Parding, Karolina 1503 - Business and Management Public education School-based management Independent Public Schools Management and Leadership Teachers Principals Student Outcomes Over the last five years, with the above colleagues at Curtin University and the University of Sydney, I have examined the changes associated with the Independent Public Schools policy initiative in Western Australia. This research has in part involved comparative policy analysis which has placed the IPS initiative within a broader history of attempts by governments to devolve responsibility and decision making through the establishment of local school ‘autonomy’ or ‘self-managing schools’. Despite a very mixed record of effects, school autonomy has been embraced widely by western nations, including British ‘Academy’ schools, USA ‘Charter’ schools, and a surge of ‘independent’ schools, such as in Sweden. In Australia, such government devolution policies have included Better Schools in Western Australia (1987) Schools Renewal in New South Wales (1989) and Schools of the Future in Victoria (1993). For all the initial discussion of the novelty of the IPS policy, and all its focus on community and school empowerment as opposed to choice, competition and efficiency, the IPS initiative is part of this broader reform agenda to transform public education. In reviewing this experience of the push towards self-managing schools within Australia and internationally we found that what occurs through such policies is a shift of risk to families and an abrogation of responsibility on behalf of government to operate and fund an inclusive and equitable public education system (Fitzgerald and Rainnie 2011; Fitzgerald and Rainnie 2012). As I note below, research has consistently shown, at best, a very tenuous link between school autonomy and improved student outcomes across public education systems. 2016 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80015 English https://www.parliament.wa.gov.au/Parliament/commit.nsf/luInquiryPublicSubmissions/4B96A0397DA4400748257FB80026BC50/$file/18.pdf Legislative Assembly, Parliament of Western Australia restricted
spellingShingle 1503 - Business and Management
Public education
School-based management
Independent Public Schools
Management and Leadership
Teachers
Principals
Student Outcomes
Fitzgerald, Scott
McGrath-Champ, Susan
Wilson, Rachel
Stacey, Meghan
Rainnie, Al
Parding, Karolina
Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title_full Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title_fullStr Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title_full_unstemmed Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title_short Submission to Education and Health Standing Committee Inquiry into the Department of Education's Independent Public Schools Initiative
title_sort submission to education and health standing committee inquiry into the department of education's independent public schools initiative
topic 1503 - Business and Management
Public education
School-based management
Independent Public Schools
Management and Leadership
Teachers
Principals
Student Outcomes
url https://www.parliament.wa.gov.au/Parliament/commit.nsf/luInquiryPublicSubmissions/4B96A0397DA4400748257FB80026BC50/$file/18.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80015