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Developments in school‐based management: The specific case of Queensland, Australia

Bob Lingard (School of Education, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia)
Debra Hayes (Faculty of Education, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia)
Martin Mills (School of Education, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia)

Journal of Educational Administration

ISSN: 0957-8234

Article publication date: 1 February 2002

2915

Abstract

This history of the politics of moves towards school‐based management in Queensland education is located within a broader historical and political analysis of such moves across Australia since the Karmel Report. This paper specifically focuses in on developments in Queensland. The Queensland analysis traces the moves from Labor’s Focus on Schools through the Coalition’s Leading Schools and the most recent Labor rearticulation in the document Future Directions for School‐based Management in Queensland State Schools. The analysis demonstrates that the concept of school‐based management has no stipulative meaning, but rather is a contested concept. More generally, the paper provides an account and analysis of new forms of governance in educational systems and the tension between centralising and decentralising tendencies as school‐based management is adopted in order to address a number of competing policy objectives.

Keywords

Citation

Lingard, B., Hayes, D. and Mills, M. (2002), "Developments in school‐based management: The specific case of Queensland, Australia", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 40 No. 1, pp. 6-30. https://doi.org/10.1108/09578230210415625

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited

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