Fr. 80.00

District Financial Leadership Today - Educational Excellence Tomorrow

English · Hardback

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Description

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The components of sound district finance and management, that are increasingly important in an era of scarce financial, material, and human resources, are provided in this book, along with some clear and related recommendations.

List of contents










Foreword: Philip H. Nisonoff, Ed.D.
Introduction to School District Financial Leadership
Chapter 1: "N.A.P.E.R.R." Steps in a Budget Model and Process
Chapter 2: Enrollment: Students Drive the "Budget Bus" (co-authored by William Hartman, Professor Emeritus, Penn State University, and Robert Schoch, Ph.D. candidate Penn State University)
Chapter 3: Personnel: Education is a People Enterprise
Chapter 4: Special Education: Special Program Needs Budgeting
Chapter 5: State Education Aid: How to Budget and Manage State Funding
Chapter 6: Budgeting and Managing Federal Aid for Schools
Chapter 7: Budgeting and Managing Local Revenues
Chapter 8: Movements to Privatize District Funding in the U.S.A. and U.K.
Chapter 9: Managing School District's Funding Programs Now: Quality Education for All
About the Authors


About the author

Stephen V. Coffin, PhD, MBA, MPA, is an Adjunct Professor of School Finance and Higher Education Economics and Finance for Montclair State University’s Graduate School of Education and an Adjunct Professor of Finance for the University of Dayton’s Online Ed.D. Program.Bruce S. Cooper, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus, Education Administration and Public Policy, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University; having taught at University of Pennsylvania and Dartmouth College, after receiving his doctorate at the University of Chicago with Donald A. Erickson, as his mentor. Cooper has written 35 books on education politics and policy, including The Handbook of Education Politics and Policy, in two editions with Lance D. Fusarelli and James Cibulka; served as President of the Politics of Education Association and a founding member of Private School Research Association; and received the Jay D. Scribner Award for Mentoring and the UCEA.

Summary

LangtextDer 10. August 1628 war ein sonniger Sommertag, an dem nur eine leichte Brise wehte. Es war der Tag der Jungfernfahrt der Vasa, des größten und prächtigsten Schiffs der schwedischen Flotte, das mit einem Rumpf aus dem Holz von tausend Eichen, 64 schweren Kanonen und über 50 Meter hohen Masten Furcht und Schrecken unter den Feinden des Königreichs verbreiten sollte. Doch die Fahrt endete mit einer Katastrophe: nach kaum einer Seemeile wurde die scheinbar unbezwingbare Vasa von einer Windbö getroffen, kenterte und sank.
333 Jahre später, am Morgen des 24. April 1961, durchbricht die Vasa den Wasserspiegel. Fünf Jahre hatten Taucher, Marinesoldaten und Wissenschaftler an der Bergung gearbeitet; am Ende hatten sie die halb im Meeresgrund versunkene Vasa sechsfach untertunnelt, mit Stahltrossen angehoben und so in 16 Etappen dem Meer entwunden. Mit dieser Bergung, einer weltweiten Sensation, schlug die Geburtsstunde der modernen Meeresarchäologie.
Sehr viel kleinere Objekte als die Vasa sind für die Forschung oft von nicht geringerer Bedeutung: von einem Beil aus dem roten Helgoländer Flint, das Meeresarchäologen an der Küste Hollands entdeckten, über Knochensplitter im nordfriesischen Watt bis hin zu Schiffsnägeln und kleinsten eisernen Kalfatklammern, die Aufschluß geben über Blütezeit und Niedergang ganzer Städte.

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