The Administration of educational development in Latin America

Based on the realization that 20 years of educational development efforts in Latin America have had little result, this author identified problems in educational administration at the national and regional levels that are largely responsible for the lack of progress. A number of structural and legal problems were identified, including the needlessly complicated structure of educational administration, a surfeit of regulations, obsolete laws, red tape, and overrigid centralization. Unproductive practices related to administrative personnel were pinpointed, including the selection of administrators with very little training in administration from the ranks of teachers. Some deficiencies identified in local and regional organization included the lack of authority of regional administrative offices and the lack of involvement of individual schools in planning and decision-making. The organization of the inspectorate was seen as impeding progress, partly because inspectors have an overwhelming accumulation of disparate duties and little training or support. Finally, difficulties regarding administrative aspects of the planning process were looked at, including isolation of the planning unit, lack of meetings of the senior officers, and lack of expertise among some staff members. Suggestions to remedy these problems emphasized that administrative reform should be a prime component of educational development planning (from ERIC database)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: UNESCO IIEP, Olivera, Carlos E.
Format: book biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: UNESCO-IIEP
Subjects:Educational administration, Educational development, Administrative structure, Government educational bodies, Bureaucracy, Centralization, Educational administrators, Regional educational bodies, Educational supervision,
Online Access:https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000070172
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spelling dig-unesdoc-ark:-48223-pf00000701722018-12-03T13:07:41ZLatin AmericaUNESCO IIEPOlivera, Carlos E.1979Based on the realization that 20 years of educational development efforts in Latin America have had little result, this author identified problems in educational administration at the national and regional levels that are largely responsible for the lack of progress. A number of structural and legal problems were identified, including the needlessly complicated structure of educational administration, a surfeit of regulations, obsolete laws, red tape, and overrigid centralization. Unproductive practices related to administrative personnel were pinpointed, including the selection of administrators with very little training in administration from the ranks of teachers. Some deficiencies identified in local and regional organization included the lack of authority of regional administrative offices and the lack of involvement of individual schools in planning and decision-making. The organization of the inspectorate was seen as impeding progress, partly because inspectors have an overwhelming accumulation of disparate duties and little training or support. Finally, difficulties regarding administrative aspects of the planning process were looked at, including isolation of the planning unit, lack of meetings of the senior officers, and lack of expertise among some staff members. Suggestions to remedy these problems emphasized that administrative reform should be a prime component of educational development planning (from ERIC database)151 p.ElectronicMicrofichePaperonline resourcemicrofichevolumehttps://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000070172engUNESCO-IIEPIIEP Research ReportEducational administrationEducational developmentAdministrative structureGovernment educational bodiesBureaucracyCentralizationEducational administratorsRegional educational bodiesEducational supervisionThe Administration of educational development in Latin Americabookhttps://unesdoc.unesco.org/in/rest/api/getNoticeAttachment?noticeId=0000070172
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-unesdoc
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio UNESDOC
language eng
topic Educational administration
Educational development
Administrative structure
Government educational bodies
Bureaucracy
Centralization
Educational administrators
Regional educational bodies
Educational supervision
Educational administration
Educational development
Administrative structure
Government educational bodies
Bureaucracy
Centralization
Educational administrators
Regional educational bodies
Educational supervision
spellingShingle Educational administration
Educational development
Administrative structure
Government educational bodies
Bureaucracy
Centralization
Educational administrators
Regional educational bodies
Educational supervision
Educational administration
Educational development
Administrative structure
Government educational bodies
Bureaucracy
Centralization
Educational administrators
Regional educational bodies
Educational supervision
UNESCO IIEP
Olivera, Carlos E.
The Administration of educational development in Latin America
description Based on the realization that 20 years of educational development efforts in Latin America have had little result, this author identified problems in educational administration at the national and regional levels that are largely responsible for the lack of progress. A number of structural and legal problems were identified, including the needlessly complicated structure of educational administration, a surfeit of regulations, obsolete laws, red tape, and overrigid centralization. Unproductive practices related to administrative personnel were pinpointed, including the selection of administrators with very little training in administration from the ranks of teachers. Some deficiencies identified in local and regional organization included the lack of authority of regional administrative offices and the lack of involvement of individual schools in planning and decision-making. The organization of the inspectorate was seen as impeding progress, partly because inspectors have an overwhelming accumulation of disparate duties and little training or support. Finally, difficulties regarding administrative aspects of the planning process were looked at, including isolation of the planning unit, lack of meetings of the senior officers, and lack of expertise among some staff members. Suggestions to remedy these problems emphasized that administrative reform should be a prime component of educational development planning (from ERIC database)
format book
topic_facet Educational administration
Educational development
Administrative structure
Government educational bodies
Bureaucracy
Centralization
Educational administrators
Regional educational bodies
Educational supervision
author UNESCO IIEP
Olivera, Carlos E.
author_facet UNESCO IIEP
Olivera, Carlos E.
author_sort UNESCO IIEP
title The Administration of educational development in Latin America
title_short The Administration of educational development in Latin America
title_full The Administration of educational development in Latin America
title_fullStr The Administration of educational development in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed The Administration of educational development in Latin America
title_sort administration of educational development in latin america
publisher UNESCO-IIEP
url https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000070172
work_keys_str_mv AT unescoiiep theadministrationofeducationaldevelopmentinlatinamerica
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