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A study of communications between the system and service delivery sectors to learning centres in ACT high schools

The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of
communication between the Operations branch, the Student Services
Section and High School Learning Centres within the Services Division of
the ACT Department of Education.
Data was collected from administrators and educators alike. The survey
instrument was designed specifically to examine the perception of the
effectiveness of organisational communication between the bureaucratic
administrative group within the ACT Department Education Department
and the personnel within the ACT High Schools Learning Centres
responsible for service delivery to students in Learning Centres. The
survey instrument addressed five factors. These factors included
Horizontal and Vertical Communication, Personal Feedback, Media Quality
and Barriers to Communication.
The findings from the survey were organised into six major findings and
four subsidiary findings and discussion on each finding followed.
The findings of the study indicated that, effective co-ordination in a large
organisation requires some centralized direction. The relationship that
exists between the three organisational domains of the Act Department of
Education responsible for the delivery of effective service to Learning
Centre clients in ACT High Schools had been shown to be an impersonal
mechanism of control designed by the Policy and Management domains in
part, and a culturally diffuse but personal mechanism of control used by
the Service domain personnel within the Learning Centres themselves.
What has emerged from the study is evidence that would suggest that there
is lack of an effective link between the more bureaucratic Policy and
Management domains and the more open and less formal Service domain
sector.
The findings have implications for the bureaucrats involved in the change
process which has been part of regionalisation. The findings of the study
indicate that regionalisation does not appear to provide a panacea for the
major difficulties associated with communication as revealed in this
study.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/218629
Date January 1991
CreatorsOwner, Ann, n/a
PublisherUniversity of Canberra. Education
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Rights), Copyright Ann Owner

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