School Improvement Through Performance Feedback

Hardback

Main Details

Title School Improvement Through Performance Feedback
Authors and Contributors      Edited by A. J. Visscher
Edited by R. Coe
SeriesContexts of Learning
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:272
ISBN/Barcode 9789026519338
ClassificationsDewey:371.2
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint Swets & Zeitlinger
Publication Date 1 January 2002
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Internationally there is an increasing trend to publish and feed back information to schools and teachers on their functioning. School improvement is often the central goal, though accountability and the promotion of parental/student school choice also play an important role.;Practical initiatives and research in this field have often failed to recognize the full complexity of improving schools through school performance feedback. Relevant questions are, for example, to what extent: the information fed back to schools is valued and understood by them; the school performance feedback enables appropriate diagnosis and remediation to take place in schools; the use of the feedback generates conflicts and tensions for teachers and administrators; the features of the implementation process and school organization influence the utilization of school performance feedback systems; schools do actually improve as a result of performance feedback; and the feedback systems have unintended effects. ;This book fills the gap by including: a thorough conceptualization of school feedback as a performance enhancing mechanism, and the prerequisites for utilizing this information in schools; a typology of school performance indicators; a review of the research on the impact of feeding back performance information to individuals and to organizations; evidence on the process, problems and impact of school performance feedback from an international variety of contexts (Australia, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, USA); and reflections on these experiences within the theoretical framework, leading to recommended strategies for school improvement through performance feedback.