ORBIS SCHOLAE
ORBIS SCHOLAE

We inform authors and readers that, following an agreement with the Karolinum publishing house, from 2024 (Volume 18), the journal Orbis scholae will be published only in electronic form.

Orbis scholae is an academic journal published by Charles University, Prague. It features articles on school education in the wider socio-cultural context. It aims to contribute to our understanding and the development of school education, and to the reflection of teaching practice and educational policy.

ORBIS SCHOLAE, Vol 1 No 2 (2007), 45–79

From Deconstruction to Systemic Reform: Educational Transformation in Hungary

Gábor Halász

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23363177.2018.166
published online: 22. 02. 2018

abstract

The study analyses the Hungarian educational transformation process following the change of regime in 1989 on the basis of a common analytical framework elaborated by the expert team of the international comparative study „Transforming Societies of Visegrád Countries and Their Educational Systems“ (led by the Institute for Research and Development of Education of the Faculty of Education of Charles University). The study presents the transformation process in ten specific areas, such as aims and functions, management and administration, financing, structural issues, quality control, school autonomy, the teaching profession, support structures and the social aspect of education. It examines the nature of the transformation process in each of theses areas using the common analytical framework distinguishing three transformational phases: (1) deconstruction, (2) stabilisation/construction/modernisation and (3) systemic reform. It is argued, that the transformation process hasprogressed unevenly in these areas, and the stage of a coherent and deliberate systemic reform has not been reached in any of them. However, system evolution processes have moved the system quite close to the more advanced stage of systemic reform. The study puts a particular emphasis on the impact of the accession of the country to the European Union in the transformation process. It argues that two different transition processes have been superimposed: one from planned economy and one-party system to market economy and parliamentary democracy, and another from national sovereignty to community membership. These two different transitions made the transformation process extremely complex and made its social and political management particularly difficult. One of the main conclusions of the study is that the shift from the second phase of transformation (construction, stabilisation and modernisation) to the third phase (systemic reform) cannot be detached from europeanisation. This shift is strongly conditioned by the nature and the quality of the process of europeanisation.

keywords: comparative education, education policy, education reform, education systems, educational change, educational transformation, European Union and education, europeanisation, systemic reform in education, transition in education, Visegrád countries

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From Deconstruction to Systemic Reform: Educational Transformation in Hungary is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

230 x 157 mm
periodicity: 3 x per year
print price: 150 czk
ISSN: 1802-4637
E-ISSN: 2336-3177

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