Collaboration is a precondition for effective delivery of inclusive education ...........73
Horizontal collaboration between government departments takes
many forms ..........................................................................................................................................74
Social inclusion policies sometimes support inclusive education provision ....75
Vertical collaboration is needed to ensure the sustainability of inclusive
education ...............................................................................................................................................77
Quality assurance mechanisms are relatively recent ....................................................... 7
Several governments engage non-government actors to varying degrees ......78
International organizations play a key role in inclusive education provision.....79
Countries are re-examining their mechanisms for financing inclusive
education .............................................................................................................................................80
How funds are transferred to schools, and how schools can use them,
affects equity and inclusion ........................................................................................................80
Direct funding to disadvantaged students and their families can support
equity and inclusion .................................................................................................................. 82
External financing has been critical in prompting inclusive education
reforms ............................................................................................................................................ 83
Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................... 83
Effective implementation of legislation and policy can be
facilitated or hindered by the way governance and finance
structures are organized and collaboration between the
two occurs. Governance relates to interactions among
actors (OECD, 2015), to roles and responsibilities across
government levels and to capacity in local government
and communities (European Agency, 2017). It involves
top-down policy dynamics but also collaboration
between government and non-government stakeholders.
An effective balance between centralization and
decentralization strategies (Caldwell, 2009; European
Agency, 2017) is a key consideration within governance
debates. Each type of strategy has advantages and
disadvantages for specific categories of actors responsible
and accountable for inclusive education. That is also
the case with funding systems aimed at ensuring that
resources are allocated equitably to schools and that all
learners have access to education opportunities of good
quality (European Agency, 2018).
This chapter addresses collaboration, cooperation and
coordination in governance and financing. It first considers
the need to break down silos in policy formulation and
implementation and looks at how education ministries
establish partnerships between education levels, between
government levels, with other sectors and with non-
government stakeholders. It then examines the financing
of services for equity and inclusion, including mechanisms
to allocate education resources to regions, schools and
students. It also discusses social protection programmes
that target vulnerable groups and can affect education,
and reviews the role of external financing.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: