(Meijer and Watkins, 2019; European Agency, 2016a, 2016b).
In Lithuania, information shared between levels improves
budget preparation to fit schools’ needs. At the beginning
of the school year, each school informs its funder
(municipality or other) about the number of learners with
recognized special education needs. The funder informs
the Centre of Information Technologies in Education,
under the Ministry of Education, Science and Sport,
which is responsible for compiling a learner database.
The rules specify that allocations for students with
special education needs should
be double the basic per
student allocation and those for ethnic minority students
5% higher. Funding for non-teaching staff, operational
resources and capital assets remains within municipal
education budgets
.
In Bulgaria, state and municipal kindergartens and schools
receive state budget funds to cover basic and additional
staff remuneration for working with children and students
from vulnerable groups, as well as other out-of-work pay
and benefits. In 2015, Estonia’s Ministry of Education
and Research adopted a new concept of early childhood
education and care that gives local governments more
flexibility in organizing provision, based on the needs of
children and families. In Slovakia, there is a high degree of
school financial autonomy to make spending decisions
that promote school improvement.
In practice, devolution of responsibility to a broad range
of actors can also lead to ineffective or inequitable use
of resources, especially when capacity for developing
effective funding plans is insufficient at the local or
school level. These concerns may be amplified by weak
articulation between decision-making
levels and limited
collaboration among the actors involved. Excessively
complex governance arrangements can lead to inefficient
school funding structures (OECD, 2017). Bosnia and
Herzegovina consists of three units: the Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina (consisting of 10 cantons),
Republika Srpska and Brčko district. Each of these
12 administrative units has its own education ministry,
legislation and budget. In this case, decentralization does
not guarantee equity. Mechanisms of financial assistance
for children from disadvantaged groups differ, in some
cases even within municipalities. For instance, learners
with special needs are entitled to transport to school
and financial assistance in some parts of the country but
not in others.
By contrast, Slovenia is characterized by a centralized
decision-making process in terms of education
governance but grants some autonomy to schools. The
financing system is prescribed in detail at the national
level. Mechanisms for monitoring spending have to
meet criteria and standards issued by the Ministry of
Education, Science and Sport. Funding allocations to
support inclusion of learners from vulnerable groups are
set by national laws and regulations,
but school councils
have autonomy to decide the annual work plan, while
taking national regulations into account.
An alternative approach is to use the budget strategically
to provide incentives for schools to achieve specific
outcomes. Conditional grants may stimulate schools
to shift towards long-term inclusive education policy
objectives, but such experimental approaches inevitably
remain small in scale. In 2017, the Ministry of Education
in Azerbaijan introduced a programme providing small
competitive grants to applicants with a record of
improving school environments, student achievement
and teaching and learning practices. The grants aim to
identify, document and share good practices and provide
support to take them to scale, working in partnership
with communities. The target beneficiaries are schools or
teachers working with communities or groups of schools.
Priorities include raising public awareness of inclusive
education, improving social pedagogy and psychological
counselling, and supporting positive school environments.
In three years, 25 projects have been awarded a total of
almost US$75,000.
The World Bank-funded 2015–22 Romanian Secondary
Education project, which supports efforts to identify
and monitor out-of-school children, provides grants to
disadvantaged upper secondary
schools to reduce early
school leaving rates and improve school performance.
Depending on the number of students enrolled and
results obtained on the baccalaureate examination, the
grant value ranges between EUR 70,000 and
EUR 152,500. The project encourages interventions in
Roma communities, learner-centred activities, mentoring
and counselling, and extracurricular activities.
Any model of decentralization needs to be relevant to
national context, as ‘even the best policies travel badly’
(Harris, 2012, p. 395). Instead of attempts to replicate
policy from other countries, international experience
should serve to ‘enrich policy analysis, not to short-cut
it’ (Raffe, 2011, p. 3). Ideally, decentralization of education
decision making should be part of broader public sector
reforms, whereas enhanced school autonomy might be
prompted by more education-specific concerns about
school management and performance (OECD, 2013).
Devolution of responsibility to a broad
range of actors can also lead to ineffective
or inequitable use of resources
81
C E N T R A L A N D E A S T E R N E U R O P E , C A U C A S U S A N D C E N T R A L A S I A
In the case of financing disability-inclusive education, a
challenge for policymakers is that spending throughout the
education system, which can
help mainstream students
from disadvantaged groups, may fail learners with
disabilities, as fulfilling their needs for support is costlier.
Funding for special and integrated education is linked to a
formal assessment involving external experts, requiring a
diagnosis that could lead to strategic behaviour by parents,
teachers or other actors. Such strategic behaviour may
result in less inclusion, more labelling and rising costs for
the education system in general (European Agency, 2016a).
The 2012 education law of the Russian Federation supports
inclusion of all students. In practice, however, mainstream
and special schools continue to operate in parallel, since
mainstream schools that are willing to enrol students with
special education needs do not receive additional funding.
Countries may use resource-based models in which fund
allocation is based on use of support services. These
systems eliminate the dependency of funding on learners’
official diagnosis and the consequent social labelling.
They finance resources used by schools to educate
students regardless of what their specific needs are. In the
Czech Republic, the use of a per capita amount per pupil
was replaced in January 2020 by a per capita amount
per pedagogical worker/member of education staff. The
new system aims to guarantee financing of the number
of hours taught. When allocating resources, it takes into
account the size and structure
of study fields in schools
and regions, the financial cost of support measures and the
salary levels of teachers in individual schools.
Direct funding to disadvantaged students and their
families can support equity and inclusion
Funding can be directed preferentially not just to
disadvantaged schools but also to disadvantaged learners
and their families. Such supplementary funding to
students may take different forms, such as scholarships or
allocations in kind. These funding modalities aim to cover
costs that could represent entry barriers to disadvantaged
students, such as school fees and the price of transport,
textbooks and meals. For instance, seven education
systems in the region target scholarships to Roma
students (
Figure 4.2
).
In North Macedonia, the Ministry of Education and
Science project Regular Class Attendance: Action for
Inclusion of Roma in Primary Education is funded by
the EU and implemented by three NGOs: Open Society
Spending throughout the education system, which can help mainstream
students from disadvantaged groups, may fail learners with disabilities, as
fulfilling their needs for support is costlier
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