PLANNING IN GARBAGE CANS: NOTES FROM THE FIELD
Abstract
“Rational planning models” emerged in the early 1970's as a means by which to plan more effectively and efficiently in educational organizations. One of the most well known and widely distributed of these models was developed by Phi Delta Kappa, the educational fraternity. This paper describes a field study conducted in five Vermont schools that were “early users” of the Phi Delta Kappa material. The outcomes reveal many discrepancies between the theory and the reality of planning in public schools. In addition to the Vermont research, other research is cited that supports many of the findings and relates them to planning in schools in general. The article concludes by linking the study outcomes to recent works by other authors on the emerging concepts of loosely coupled systems, garbage can organizations, and organized anarchies and implications these concepts hold for alternative approaches to planning in educational settings.
Citation
LARSON, R. (1982), "PLANNING IN GARBAGE CANS: NOTES FROM THE FIELD", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 20 No. 1, pp. 45-60. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009853
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1982, MCB UP Limited