Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention

A growing number of countries are reforming how schools are managed and are working to involve parents and com¬munities more directly into the school management process. The idea behind school-based man¬agement reform is that devolving responsibili...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Brief
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/09/25021955/indonesia-parents’-attention
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23341
id okr-10986-23341
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-233412021-04-23T14:04:14Z Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention World Bank PRIMARY SCHOOLS SCHOOL MANAGEMENT PARENTS COMMUNITIES KNOWLEDGE CHILDREN EDUCATION TEACHERS QUALITY OF EDUCATION JOB OPPORTUNITIES STUDENT SCHOOLS REFORM AUTONOMY PARTICIPATION PARENTAL PARTICIPATION SCHOOL VISITS STUDENT PERFORMANCE GROUPS INFORMATION STUDENTS MONITORING PUBLIC SCRUTINY INTERVENTIONS SCHOOL STAFF RESEARCHERS EDUCATION BUDGET COMMUNITY CAMPAIGNS JOB SCHOOL OFFICIALS FEES LEARNING SCHOOL COMMITTEE RESEARCH PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT BLOCK GRANTS SCHOOL PROGRAM SCHOOL GRANTS SCHOOL COMMITTEES REVIEW FUTURE RESEARCH A growing number of countries are reforming how schools are managed and are working to involve parents and com¬munities more directly into the school management process. The idea behind school-based man¬agement reform is that devolving responsibility to schools and to those who use the schools will improve ac¬countability, transparency and ensure that resources are allocated properly. In this way, the quality of education will improve and so will learning. However, evidence on the effective¬ness of school-based management remains mixed and parental involve¬ment is often weak. Evaluating different approaches for strengthening account¬ability and transparency in education is critical to making schools successful to improve learning. In Indonesia, the World Bank worked with the government to set up and evaluate alter¬native ways to improve parents’ knowledge of and involvement in the management of money that the government gives to schools for operational costs. The evaluation found that direct approaches, like inviting parents to a meeting or sending text messages, led to improvement in parental knowledge and ac¬tions, while sending home brochures and letters didn’t lead to any changes. As countries, including Indonesia, continue to rely on school-based management to improve accountability and learning, the evaluation shows that getting parents and communities involved, and making sure they are informed, may require more intensive efforts. 2015-12-14T22:24:54Z 2015-12-14T22:24:54Z 2015-08 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/09/25021955/indonesia-parents’-attention http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23341 English en_US From evidence to policy; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic PRIMARY SCHOOLS
SCHOOL MANAGEMENT
PARENTS
COMMUNITIES
KNOWLEDGE
CHILDREN
EDUCATION
TEACHERS
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
STUDENT
SCHOOLS
REFORM
AUTONOMY
PARTICIPATION
PARENTAL PARTICIPATION
SCHOOL VISITS
STUDENT PERFORMANCE
GROUPS
INFORMATION
STUDENTS
MONITORING
PUBLIC SCRUTINY
INTERVENTIONS
SCHOOL STAFF
RESEARCHERS
EDUCATION BUDGET
COMMUNITY
CAMPAIGNS
JOB
SCHOOL OFFICIALS
FEES
LEARNING
SCHOOL COMMITTEE
RESEARCH
PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT
BLOCK GRANTS
SCHOOL PROGRAM
SCHOOL
GRANTS
SCHOOL COMMITTEES
REVIEW
FUTURE RESEARCH
spellingShingle PRIMARY SCHOOLS
SCHOOL MANAGEMENT
PARENTS
COMMUNITIES
KNOWLEDGE
CHILDREN
EDUCATION
TEACHERS
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
STUDENT
SCHOOLS
REFORM
AUTONOMY
PARTICIPATION
PARENTAL PARTICIPATION
SCHOOL VISITS
STUDENT PERFORMANCE
GROUPS
INFORMATION
STUDENTS
MONITORING
PUBLIC SCRUTINY
INTERVENTIONS
SCHOOL STAFF
RESEARCHERS
EDUCATION BUDGET
COMMUNITY
CAMPAIGNS
JOB
SCHOOL OFFICIALS
FEES
LEARNING
SCHOOL COMMITTEE
RESEARCH
PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT
BLOCK GRANTS
SCHOOL PROGRAM
SCHOOL
GRANTS
SCHOOL COMMITTEES
REVIEW
FUTURE RESEARCH
World Bank
Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
geographic_facet Indonesia
relation From evidence to policy;
description A growing number of countries are reforming how schools are managed and are working to involve parents and com¬munities more directly into the school management process. The idea behind school-based man¬agement reform is that devolving responsibility to schools and to those who use the schools will improve ac¬countability, transparency and ensure that resources are allocated properly. In this way, the quality of education will improve and so will learning. However, evidence on the effective¬ness of school-based management remains mixed and parental involve¬ment is often weak. Evaluating different approaches for strengthening account¬ability and transparency in education is critical to making schools successful to improve learning. In Indonesia, the World Bank worked with the government to set up and evaluate alter¬native ways to improve parents’ knowledge of and involvement in the management of money that the government gives to schools for operational costs. The evaluation found that direct approaches, like inviting parents to a meeting or sending text messages, led to improvement in parental knowledge and ac¬tions, while sending home brochures and letters didn’t lead to any changes. As countries, including Indonesia, continue to rely on school-based management to improve accountability and learning, the evaluation shows that getting parents and communities involved, and making sure they are informed, may require more intensive efforts.
format Brief
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
title_short Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
title_full Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
title_fullStr Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
title_full_unstemmed Indonesia : How to Get Parents’ Attention
title_sort indonesia : how to get parents’ attention
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/09/25021955/indonesia-parents’-attention
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23341
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