A teacher may get good, even astounding, results from his pupils while
he is teaching them and yet not be a good teacher; because it may be
that, while his pupils are directly under his influence, he raises
them to a height which is not natural to them, without fostering their
own capacities for work at this level, so that they immediately
decline again as soon as the teacher leaves the classroom. Ludwig
Wittgenstein, 1889 – 1951. It is difficult to measure effectiveness
in not-for-profit organisations like schools, colleges and
universities. There is no ‘bottom-line’ against which to gauge
performance, they have limited technical development and managers
struggle to make meaningful comparisons between outcomes and targets.
In education, well-publicised attempts have been made to establish -
some would say impose - a set of criteria by which organisations judge
success or failure. These have been largely subjective - the
percentage of inspected classes regarded as good, the extent to which
staff is involved in decision making, the appropriateness of the
leadership shown by senior managers, and so on – if occasionally
peppered with quantitative measures, like the percentage of students
achieving certain grades in public examinations, to sustain the
illusion of objectivity. This is not to fault the aspiration
necessarily, though initially at least it created a surveillance
culture in schools that did justice to neither the inspected nor the
argument for inspection. Happily, this is changing.
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Measuring and Managing Knowledge, Responsibility and Reward: Lessons from the Commercial Sector
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781402025945
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter