The report sets out a framework for School Commissioners working with local authorities to establish a coherent system based on "seven principles of good governance.
- The role of government to set policy priorities and exercise overall accountability should be acknowledged. Governments are elected with a mandate and it is entirely appropriate therefore that they should set the overarching policy framework for education and other services.
- Power should be diffused and responsibility shared. It is neither possible nor desirable to manage the whole education system from the centre.
- Markets need managing and regulating.In a system where greater diversity and choice is being promoted then checks and balances are needed to ensure that competition and collaboration can both play their part in improving education outcomes.
- Diversity is healthy.The system does not need to look exactly the same in all parts of the country and it can aid learning if different parts of a system pursue different strategies.
- The education system will be more effective if it maximizes social capital (Hargreaves, 2012). Building trust between schools and maximising the contribution of social entrepreneurs, employers, universities, cultural and voluntary organisations, parents, grandparents and local people will deepen and spread educational progress.
- Form should follow function.The tier or body exercising responsibility should be determined by the nature of the function. Too much talk about the middle tier bundles all the potential roles into one – school improvement is talked about as a single entity; though it actually embraces a collection of functions. Delivery and oversight roles are conflated and confused.
- Alignment is key. The role of the middle tier cannot be viewed in isolation from the role of schools and school clusters on the one hand and that of government on the other. Ideally the roles complement each other to form a coherent approach where each is clear about their responsibilities and accountabilities and how they relate to each other."
If you want to read the full report you can find it at the RSA website at http://www.thersa.org/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/630053/RSA-The_Missing_Middle_report_2012.pdf
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