Sunday, March 10, 2013

Management of Resources



Management of Resources
Duties and responsibilities of Headmaster
            Headmaster of Principal holds the key position in the school.  He is, the hub of the school activity.  He draws the whole plan of the school, executes the plan, distribute, work and coordinates the activities.  He ensures smooth functioning and harmonious development of the whole school-programme.  The success of the school system depends upon his efficiency, alertness, shrewdness, imagination, originality and experiences. 

The qualities expected of a headmaster/headmistress are as follows:

(i)                 High degree of social intelligence.
(ii)               Enthusiasm, drive and push
(iii)             Cooperative attitude
(iv)             Initiative, resourcefulness and inventiveness
(v)               Sound judgement and common sense
(vi)             Conversational ability, and writing ability
(vii)           Enlighted imagination
(viii)         Flexible attitude, skepticism and progressivism
(ix)             Personal-attractiveness, sociable character, friendly manners and cheerfulness
(x)               Sympathetic, democratic and humanitarian attitude
(xi)             Executive and organizing ability
(xii)           Emotional stability and calmness

Duties and Functions of the Headmaster
            A headmaster or a principal has to perform multifarious duties.  For the sake of convenience, these can be categorized into the following:

(a)        Specific Duties

1.                  Teaching
2.                  Planning
3.                  Organizing and Administering
4.                  Supervising
5.                  Guiding and Motivating
6.                  Maintaining relations with the pupils, staff, parents and public.

1.         Teaching
                        Teaching is the first and the foremost function of the headmaster.  Some headmasters remain so much absorbed in other duties that they never enter the class.  He is thus reduced to an administrative head.  A headmaster should consider himself teacher first and teacher last.  He should therefore take 2 or 3 periods per day and teach one or two subjects in which he has specialized.  He should himself posses knowledge of the latest methods of teaching and expert proficiency in the subjects specialized in.

2.         Planning

                        Planning is the pre-requisite of any administration.  Unless the headmaster plans in time all the activities in the school, there will be confusion all round.  He has to plan throughout the year at the following stages: (a) before the opening of the school (b) on the opening day and during the first week (c) during the course of the year and lastly, (d) at the end of the year.  For making proper planning he will take the help of the staff, the students council and the Parent – Teacher Association.  He will convene staff meetings and discuss all the matters of planning with the staff.  Most of the planning will be done here.  But sometimes the students also may help in planning certain co-curricular activities, projects and community work.

3.         Organization and Administration:

                        The next important task of the headmaster is, organization.  His organization duties consist of the following:

1.                  Organization of the School Plant
2.                  Organization of the Instructional Work
3.                  Organizing School Activities
4.                  Organization of Office Work

4.         Supervision:

                        A headmaster should follow the following principles of supervision :

(i)                 Its purpose is to help, encourage and guide rather than to criticize
(ii)               It should be done in a spirit of cooperation
(iii)             It should be done regularly and effectively
(iv)             Partiality or prejudice should find no place in it
(v)               The criteria of supervision should be known to all the
             teachers

(a)                Supervision of Instructional Work
(b)               Supervision of Practical and Outdoor Work
(c)                Supervision of Co curricular Activities
(d)               Supervision of Discipline
(e)                Supervision Welfare of the Pupils
(f)                Supervision of Office Work
5. Guidance and Motivation:
          Guidance function of the headmaster is of recent origin.  He is expected to guide:

(i)     The students in the selection of the subjects at the secondary stage, leading the suitable vocations after the school leaving stage
  (ii)  The students in their day-to-day activities and instructional work
  (iii) The teacher in organizing teaching and other activities, in making a deeper 
          study of their subjects, and in solving specific problems of discipline
          backwardness, teaching etc.
  (iv) The parents in supervising the education of their words, in planning their
         education according to their abilities and aptitudes
  (v)  The higher authorities in matters of curriculum, textbooks, school
         organizing, framing of educational policies and other educational problems

6. Relations with Pupils, Staff, Parents and Public:
                      The headmaster occupies a key position in the social environment and the success of his work very much depends on his relations with staff, students, parents, public and management.

(b)               General Duties

                      In this respect the headmaster has to make to the following arrangements:

1. School Supplies:
                      A headmaster has vital responsibilities for procurement, protection and judicious use of school supplies.

                      He will appoint a selection committee for purchase and maintenance of equipment.  The committee will prepare the list of items of purchase, which are needed indispensably and will prepare the budget.  Quotations shall have to be invited form the leading firms and the lowest quotation approved by the headmaster.

2. School Campus:
                      The headmaster is responsible for the following specific tasks in connection with the school campus:

(a)    He must see that the school plant provides adequate educational service.  If there is over-crowding, students may attend the laboratories in group.  All the specific facilities of the campus should be used to the best advantage of the students.  For instance, the hall may be used for morning assembly, film show, extension lecture, dramatics, exhibitions, class-teaching and public meetings.
(b)   He must look to the protection of the buildings and guard against any building hazards.  He must arrange for timely repairing and decorations.
(c)    He must look to the daily maintenance of the campus through a committee of the staff-members.  The committee will be responsible for protection from fire and theft, petty repairs, decorations, landscaping etc.
3. Cocurricular Activities:
                      The following points need emphasis regarding the administration and organization of activities:

1.      The over all responsibility for management of the cocurricular activities rests with the headmaster.  He may delegate powers to the staff-members for their conduct, but his task is to supervise and oversee.
2.      The activities must be distributed amongst the staff members in accordance with their previous background, interest and aptitude.  The work load of teaching must be reduced in proportion to the magnitude of the responsibilities.  If possible, training facilities for some specific activities like athletics, scouting, home defence etc. may be provided, or the teachers deputed for such special training.
3.      Voluntary participation of students should be encouraged and guidance given to them for the proper choice of activities and hobbies.  The proper spirit and attitude should be fostered and jealousies, friction and unhealthy competition avoided.
4.      Recording of the participation of the students in the activities should be made regularly and evaluation done
5.      The headmaster should make adequate budget allotment of the expenses to be involved in the activities. The proper spirit in the use of money, that is, the spirit of economy should be fostered in the minds of the pupils and the teachers.  All wastage and unnecessary expenditure should be checked.
6.      Awards and prizes to students for creditable participation should be made on the basis of intrinsic worth and not extrinsic worth.  No prizes should be given unless the pupils rally deserves them.

4. Office:

                    The modern conception of a headmaster’s office is that it is a service centre.  The various services are:

(i)       Communication with the higher authorities, the parents, the public, the students.
(ii)  Transaction of school business, such as admissions, registration,
       attendance, collection of fees etc.
(iii)  Co-ordination of work done by various school agencies
(iv)  Recording, i.e. working as a repository of school records.
(v)    Maintaining account.

Duties and responsibilities of Teacher:
                      No better tributes have been paid to any man on earth than to the teacher.  East or west, everywhere he has been respected and worshipped.  If in ancient India he was ranked next to God, in the West he has been called the ‘architect of nation’, the harbinger of the progress of culture’, the maker of man’ and the ‘maker of history’.  Like a gardener, caressing the plants, he cresses young human beings and looks after their physical, mental and social growth and development.

Essential Qualities of a Teacher :

                      The essential qualities of a teacher may be classified into the following heads.:

1. The Personality traits, which will further include:

(a)    External Appearance
(b)   Physical health
(c)    Intelligence and intellectual qualities
(d)   Mental health and emotional stability
(e)    Character and moral qualities
(f)    Social traits
(g)   Other personality traits

2. General Academic Achievement, which will further include

(a)    His qualifications (general)
(b)   His general knowledge and scholarship
(c)    His thirst for knowledge, reading habits
(d)   His literary tastes, hobbies and pursuits
(e)    His expression (oral and written)

3. Professional Efficiency, which will further include

(a)    His professional pre-service training
(b)   His in-service training
(c)    His experience as teacher
(d)   His devotion to profession and other qualities.

1. Planning :
                      Before proceeding with the actual teaching work and class management, a teacher should plan thoroughly the following items:
(a)    He should plan the curriculum as a whole, the syllabus in the subjects, he teachers, and divide the syllabus into monthly and weekly units.
(b)   He should plan the use of audio-visual and other aids, and procure those in advance
(c)    He should plan the time-table, and the actual class-work in accordance with the time-schedule.
(d)   He should plan all the co-curricular activities, to be organized during the session
2. Educating:

                      Teaching is his first and foremost duty.  It is his duty to have a thorough knowledge of the subject, he teachers, study and practice the latest techniques of teaching, select the learning materials, manage the daily routines and procedures of teaching, and motivate the students to learn.  He should give sufficient and adequate home-task and make regular correction of written work. He has to direct co-curricular activities and look to the all-round development of pupils.

3. Organizing :

                      A teacher has to organize the following items:

(a)    He has to organize various curricular and cocurricualr activities
(b)    He has to organize the school plant look to decoration and upkeep of the school campus, make seating arrangements, maintain the equipment, distribute the furniture and pay attention to the sanitation of the surroundings.
(c)    He has to organize library work of the pupils
(d)   Organization of the instructional work is the most important duty  This includes organization of syllabus, classification of pupils, construction of time-table, and assignment of work.

4. Supervision:

                       A teacher has to supervise the work of the pupils.  He should ensure regular attendance and regular work, and detect irregularities.  He has to check the practical work, the written work and supervised study by the pupils.  He has to maintain discipline and order in the school.  He has to supervise games and other activities of the pupils.  He may have to supervise the work of the pupils in the hostel.

5. Guidance:

                      The teacher has to guide the students in a number of matters.  He has to guide them in the proper selection of subjects, leading to whole-some vocations.  He has to guide them in their students.  He shall have to recognize the personality, strengths and  weakness of his pupils and so adjust his own attitude and behaviour that the is able to motivate the students to work.  He has to give guidance to he back-ward, and the slow learner.  He has to guide and adopt remedial measures for the delinquent, abnormal and mal-adjusted children in brief, educational, vocational and personal guidance is an essential part of the teacher’s duty.

6.  Recording:

                      He has to keep record of the work of the pupils and of their day-to-day participation in activities.  He has to record their admission, attendance, realization of fee and other matters.  He has to help the office in maintaining certain school records such as stock of furniture, issue of furniture, supply of equipment, university results, scholarships awarded to pupils, fees realized, admissions and withdrawals, cumulative records etc.

7. Evaluation:

                      A teacher is expected not only to educate but also to evaluate the achievement of the pupils from time to tem, diagnose weaknesses and spotlight brightness.  For this purpose he has to conduct house-tests, score papers, tabulate marks, determine policies of promotion and prepares results.  In the case of secondary classes, he has to send awards in internal assessment to the examing authorities.  It is his duty to know the latest techniques in evaluation.  He must be convenient with the new-type-tests, construction of test-items according to objectives and method of scoring.

8. Maintaining Relations :

                      This has been already discussed above.

Leadership and leadership style :

Meaning of Leadership
Leadership is indispensable for the successful functioning of an organization and attainment of its goals and objectives. Keith Davis observed, "Without leadership, an organization is but a muddle of men and machines... Leadership transforms potential into reality. It is the ultimate act which brings to success all the potential that is in an organization and its people."
Definition
Keith Davis: "Leadership is the ability to persuade others to seek defined objectives enthusiastically."
Koontz and O'Donnell: "Leadership is the activity of persuading people to cooperate in the achievement of a common objective.
Terry: "Leadership is the activity of influencing people to strive willingly for mutual objectives."

Leadership Styles:
Definition :  Leadership style is defined as the leader’s behavior pattern as perceived by his subordinates when he is attempting to influence, guide, or direct their activities.  Therefore, your leadership style is not always determined by what you think it is, but many times by how your subordinates think you lead.  A leader must be constantly aware of this perception and know how to best approach subordinates in each given situation

Different Leadership Styles:
(1) Autocratic : The autocratic style is where the leader make all decisions for his subordinates and tells them what to do, how, when, where, etc.

LEADERSHIP STYLES

2. Democratic :  The democratic style is where the leader allows his subordinates to make their own decisions within general or mission type guidelines set by the senior.

2. Style Variations :



 



 

 Between these two extremes are variations.  These leadership style variations depend on how much authority and direction is either kept by the leaders or is delegated to the subordinate.  For the sake of discussion we can divide the continuum into four “basic” styles. As we discuss these four style variations remember that there are varying degrees of the basic styles based on the exact amount of authority the leader desires to use or delegate.  A particular style of leadership might not be successful everywhere and might not be used effectively for every one.  What “selling”, or persuasive style to another.  Sometimes we all need to be “told” what to do because our motivation, understanding, or experience level is low; at other times all we need is a mission to get us going.  For example, your leadership must be consistent but your style should be flexible, what is effective in one situation may not get the positive results in a similar situation at another time and place.

(a) Telling Style:
            This is characterized by one-way communication where the leader defines his followers’ roles by “telling” them what to do, when to do it, how to do it, and where to do it, For example, it is very natural and intelligent to expect a leader to assume a very authoritarian ‘telling” style during a fire fight, or crisis situation; in fact our subordinates expect their leaders to react on a forceful and decisive manner during these situations.

(b) Selling Style:
            The leader uses two-way communication to gain his followers support by explaining the reasoning behind his decision.  This style allows the subordinates minimal participation, but helps them to better understand and hopefully “buy into” the leader’s decision.  In this case the leader is explaining why he made the decision and then tries to ‘sell” the decision to the group by using persuasion.  By taking them into his confidence relative to his decision, he will gain their support for his plan and they will be more motivated to go along with the plan.
© Participating Style:
            The leader allows  the subordinates to be involved in the actual decision making process.  It requires good two-way communication and the leader’s willingness to be influenced by his subordinates’ knowledge and opinions.  Here the leader actually discusses possible alternative solutions with the group prior to making his decision.
(d) Delegating Style: 
            The leader provides mission-type orders/guidelines and minimal supervision.  Essentially, the group is allowed to run its own show within the limits provided by the leader.  The leader has provided his subordinates their limits, guidelines, and necessary authority to complete the task; he then gives them their mission, and allows them to accomplish the mission as they see fit.
Managerial Grid
Managerial grid x axis is approach geared for production, y axis is approach geared for peopleRobert Blake and Jane Mouton believe that management exists to encourage efficiency and performance, creativity, experimentation and innovation, and learning from colleagues. This needs teaching and learning. It combines an approach for people and an approach for production and was formulated into a grid applied around the world and in many business departments, as well as organisations which have a production of some sort but may not usually be counted as businesses. Indeed different organisations can ask themselves where about in the grid should they be aiming their own management approaches. The grid itself suggests that management is best at a 9,9 co-ordinates, where both people and production concerns are fully addressed, but a question is whether this is always appropriate, either all the time or at different times.

1,9: Country club management
Production is incidental to lack of conflict and good fellowship.
 
9,9: Team management
Production is from integration of task and human requirements.

5,5: Dampened pendulum (middle of the road)
Push for production but not all out giving space and being fair but firm.


1,1: Impoverished management
Effective production is unobtainable because people are lazy, apathetic, and indifferent and also sound and mature relationships are impossible because human nature inevitably leads to conflict.

1,9: Task management
People are a commodity, just like machines. A manager's responsibility is to plan, direct and control the work of subordinates.
A 9 by 9 grid is suggested, with degrees of variation, but five positions are given as a matter of simplicity.
Production means what ever the organisation is supposed to be doing. Each department has its own task to which it should be dedicated. People means all the human relations goals set out by an organisation, including commitment to equal opportunities, personal commitment, respect and proper procedures.
1,9: Country Club
9,9: Team Leader
1,1: Impoverished
9,1: Authoritarian
1,9 management has been called country club management in that it concerns itself with positive encouragement but the avoidance of conflict. Work (or the task) is something people do, but they do it in work time. Everyone (or the person) jollies and jokes along with one other and cannot criticise, in the hope that things get done as a result.
9,1 Task management is all about the rigour associated with high efficient output. There are orders to be given, received and obeyed, and schedules should not be missed. Mistakes lead to blame and correction, and if the employee is not up to the task under this regime then another job is the only medium term outcome. There is a high degree of supervision and control, and creativity is only placed high within the hierarchy. Lower down people do not need to be creative and indeed to say anything different is insubordination. Whilst high output is achievable in the short term, much will be lost through an inevitable high labour turnover.
1,1 must be unskilled management because it neither shows much concern for production nor people. The fact is that there are such people around and many of them who have perhaps been overlooked by the organisation in terms of career progression. People reciprocate. So these managers go in, do their jobs with a minimum of effort, wait for home time to come, and then leave. If responsibility is required, then it is avoided; if people need to be motivated, nothing much happens beyond the minimum of instructing.
5,5 Management is a kind of realistic medium without ambition. It is deemed as practical. It is also an outcome when production and people issues are seen as in conflict.   There is never too much jollying and humour - but some, and never too much criticism - but some if really needed. Such an approach may follow times of lack of success in a previous period of ambition, or when a 1,9 or 9,1 approach did not work due to perceived deficiencies which created problems in the organisation. This position is called pendulum dampening because so often a pendulum swings between 1,9 and 9,1. managers change approach: perhaps new work comes in or there is a perceived need to increase performance and the firm must get busy; or perhaps there has been a dispute and the organisation needs to repair relationships.
9,9 management then is when there is no zero sum game or crowding out, and when systems are in place, and management teams working, to get the best out of an organisation in terms of commitment and human relations. Information must flow up and down the system, and everyone must feel valued. That value must be highly purposive, and directed into the objectives of the organisation, and indeed where the valuing is gained. Managers must feel able to consult with each other without mini-empires developing in a spirit of co-operation to achieve the overall objectives. Of course conflict does arise, but it has systems that allow it to work through without avoidance, so that people can continue their work and work together. It may be that conflict cannot be completely ended, but the organisation faces it and seeks the best outcome.
Organizational Commitment
            Organizational commitment to the school is an important concept in the analysis of school life. The quality of the workplace or the organizational health of the school will have a determining effect on teacher’s commitment. Fostering organizational commitment among the academic staff is important because employees who are highly committed, stay longer, perform better, miss less work and engage in organizational citizenship behaviours. Teachers who are not committed to their workplace are likely to put less effort in the classroom as compared to teachers with high levels of commitment. This would affect student learning and achievement. There should be a social relationship or the interactions among the key personnel in a school such as the principal, teachers and students.

Definition                            
According to Hagen, organizational commitment is the employee’s expected likelihood of remaining employed in the same organization.
According to Herscovitch and Meyer’s organizational commitment is the degree to which an employee identifies with the goals and values of the organization and is willing to exert effort to help it succeed.

Factors affecting organizational commitment

Institutional integrity: The schools ability to cope with its environment in a way that maintains the educational integrity of its programs. Teachers are protected from unreasonable community and parental demands.
Principal influence: The principal’s ability to influence the actions of superiors. Being able to persuade superiors, to get additional consideration and to proceed unimpeded by the hierarchy are important aspects of school administration.
Academic Freedom

            Academic freedom is a central value of higher education. It affects the academic profession in all aspects of academic work. Academic freedom is the belief that the freedom of inquiry by students and faculty members is essential to the mission of the academy, and that scholars should have freedom to teach or communicate ideas or facts without being targeted for repression, job loss, or imprisonment.
Definition
Academic freedom means as institution "determine for itself on academic grounds”
  1. who may teach,
  2. what may be taught,
  3. how it should be taught, and
  4. who may be admitted to study
Academic freedom for teachers
            Academic freedom for teachers includes the right and responsibility
  • to study,
  • investigate,
  • present,
  • interpret,
  • Discuss, and debate relevant facts, issues, and ideas in fields of the teacher’s professional competence.
Academic freedom for students
            Academic freedom for students provides
  • the right to study,
  • question,
  • Interpret, and discuss relevant facts, ideas, and issues under consideration in those courses. These freedoms imply no limitations, within the guidelines of the subject area.

Academic freedom for institutions

            Academic freedom for institutions inclde the freedom to appoint faculty, set standards and admit students.

Professional development

Professional development refers to skills and knowledge attained for both personal development and career advancement. Professional development encompasses all types of facilitated learning opportunities, ranging from college degrees to formal coursework, conferences and informal learning opportunities situated in practice.

            Professional development may also come in the form of pre-service or in-service professional development programs. These programs may be formal, or informal, group or individualized. Individuals may pursue professional development independently, or programs may be offered by human resource departments. Professional development on the job may develop or enhance process skills, sometimes referred to as leadership skills, as well as task skills.
Class room Management:

                        Managing a classroom is an integral part of the teaching-learning process.  Effective management of a classroom shows the concern of a teacher for the instructional process. It is dependent on his efficiency to do the tasks more effectively.  Therefore, classroom management, both as a process and as an approach, has a great impact on students’  learning.  It increases learning efficiency of the students.  Thus classroom management has a closer relation with students’ accomplishment of learning objectives.
Classroom management refers to the shaping of learning environment in classroom.

            Classroom management has been defined as provisions and procedures necessary to establish and maintain an environment in a classroom in which instruction and learning can occur.  You should remember that the primary goal of effective classroom management is not the reduction of misbehavior or even the creation of an orderly environment.  Although they are issues, effective classroom management and establishment of order and not they synonymous.  Promoting student learning is the primary goal of effective classroom management.  The research in this area clearly suggests that effective strategies to promote learning can facilitate order.  So the primary emphasis in effective classroom management is on the creation of a learning environment and hence on increasing appropriate behaviour in students.

Techniques of Classroom Management:

1. Behaviour modification technique:

            The basis assumption behind this technique is that student behaviour is the direct result of teacher behaviour.  It is the job of the teacher to identify desirable and undesirable classroom behaviours.  The teacher has to ignore inappropriate/undesirable behaviour and reinforce appropriate/desirable behaviour.  According to Skinner, the teacher can use reinforcement (you will recall that reinforcement is a condition of learning) to shape the desired behaviour.  For example, if the student demonstrates (verbal or non-verbal) desirable behaviour, it should be appropriately acknowledged and rewarded.

2. Student responsibility: 
            Some teachers feel that the students should be responsible for their behaviour. The teacher’s job is to make the student aware of the expectations and the consequences of their desirable and undesirable behaviours.  This technique of managing a classroom advocates self-discipline among the students.

3. Group activities:
            In order to manage their class, some teachers prefer to deal with a group of students, rather than with individual students.  Thy see the class as a group which is influenced by peers.  The students working together exhibit desired behaviour in order to gain group rewards.

4. Skill in maintaining students’ attention:
            All effective teachers continuously monitor their students for signs of inattention and are sensitive to their needs.  The seating arrangement should be made in such a way that the teacher can see all the students effortlessly.  Besides, variation in voice, movement or pacing can be used to refocus their attention during teaching.

Management of School Building

            “While it is true that a bad workman blames his tools, it is certain that the best wok can only be accomplished with the best tools”.

The main School Building will include the following:

1.      Assembly hall
2.      Library and museum
3.      Administrative sections which will further include:
(a)    Principal’s room
(b)   Visitor’s room
(c)    Office
(d)   Record room
(e)    Staff room
(f)    Committee room
(g)   Guidance and counseling room

The administrating section should have its own tiolet.

4. The Medical Section, which should include  (i) The Doctor’s room (ii) The dispensary, (iii) The sick room or bed room for the patients.

5. Students Common Room Section, which should include :

            (i) Common room of the pupils (separate for boys and girls)
            (ii) Lunch room (separate for boys and girls)
            (iii) Toilet (separate for boys and girls)          
            In a co-educational institution the common room section for boys should be kept well – apart from that for girls.

6.  Activities Section, which should include:

                        (i) Games room
                        (ii) Games stores
                        (iii) Scouting/Girl guiding room
                        (iv) N.C.C., N.S.S., A.C.C. room,
                        (v) Photography club room etc.

7.  Crafts Section, including:

            (i) Craft workshop and
            (ii) Crafts store for each of individual craft introduced in the school

8. Art Section including :

            (i) Drawing and Painting Workshop
            (ii) Drawing and Painting Gallery
9.  Science Section, which will include:

            (i) One lecture theatre
            (ii) One laboratory
            (iii) One museum and
            (iv) One store each of the Science subjects like Physics, Chemistry, Biology,  
                   Geology etc.

10. Agriculture Section including:

            (i) One lecture room
            (ii) One museum and
            (iii) One store room

11. Music and Dance Section, including :

            (i) One demonstration room
            (ii) One musical apparatus room and
            (iii) One dance room

12. Home Science Section, including

            (i) One lecture
            (ii) One Home Science workshop
            (iii) One Home Science Kitchen
            (iv) One store

13. Commerce Section including:
            (i) One lecture room
            (ii) One workshop
            (iii) One store

14. Technological Section, including

(i) One lecture room
            (ii) One workshop
            (iii) One store

15. Subject rooms like

            (i) Geography room
            (ii) Mathematics room
            (iii) Economics room
            (iv) Language room
            (v) Room for any other subject

            Magnificent buildings, hug equipment and larges scale furniture go waste for want of proper maintenance and care.  The efficiency of operation of maintenance of the school campus depends largely on the type of the personnel in charge of the task.  He should not economize  in the  payment of a certain allowance to the member in charge of campus, and in spending from time to time some amount on repairs and up-keep. The functions of the custodian are no meager.  These include the following tasks:

            (i) Maintenance of the school lawns, the flower beds, the hedge and the turf.
            (ii) Maintenance of the  playgrounds, the leveling, marking and keeping them tidy
            (iii) The maintenance of the school building, regular cleaning, white washing
                   colouring  and repairing
.           (iv) The proper care of the toilet, rooms, their sanitation and regular cleaning
            (v) The maintenance of the furniture, their distribution, use, care, up-keep and
                  timely repairing.
            (vi) The safety and security of the school property.  A school chaukidar works
        under him and is at his back and call.
(vi) Keeping the whole school campus neat and tidy.

A custodian should be brought to feel a sense of ownership or pride in the building. He  should take  regular round, so as to observe even the minute things, like waste paper in the hall, accumulating dust on windows, unserviceable black-boards, stair ways, cob-webs, trampled turf in the lawn, broken stools etc.

In the maintenance of the building a custodian should be helped by a special  committee of staff and the students.  The committee should make periodical stock-taking of the school property and submit its report, suggesting anything to be written off, replace or repaired anything to be purchased a new and anything lost or stolen.  The committee must be incharge of leading and getting back furniture etc.  The building may sometimes be used, by the community.  In that case the custodian and the committee have to be vigilant so that anything is not damaged or lost while the campus is used for social education classes, public lectures and community functions.
Management of library
            Library as a gate way knowledge and repository of culture of instrument of advancement.  It is, therefore, one of the essential functions of an educational administrator to organize a library, enrich it from time to time and to expand its services so as to benefit each and every pupil.

·         To acquire books, and other materials in line with the demands of the curriculum and  the needs of boys and girls and to organize these materials for effective use.
·         To guide pupils in their choice of books and other materials of learning desired both for personal and curricular purpose.
·         To develop in pupils skill and resourcefulness in their use of books and other materials of learning desired both for personal habit of personal investigation.
·         To help pupils establish a wide range of significant interests
·         To provide aesthetic experience and develop appreciation of Arts
·         To encourage life-long education through the use of library sources
·         To encourage social attitudes and provide experience in social and democratic living
·         To work cooperatively and constructively with instructional and administrative staff of the school.

Organization of Library:
1. Library Building and Equipment:
            (i)         The main library hall, housing almirahs containing books etc.
            (ii)        The reading room, housing periodicals, journals and newspapers.  It may
accommodate at least 30 students at a time.  The back numbers must be placed in special racks.
(iii)             The librarian’s room, which should have the Libran’s table, racks for books awaiting technical process and catalogues and almirahs.
(iv)             The Store –room for storing books, periodicals etc.
            (v)        seminar-room for discussion and seminars

The above arrangement is suggested for an ideal higher secondary school. 

2. The Organization of Library Rooms:
            Each school should have as separate library-room meant for the express purpose of stocking and issuing books. The selection of eh place must be made on certain principles.  In the   first instance, the library should be housed in a room which is the quietest corner of the school-building, so that traffic and noise do not disturb the peaceful atmosphere so necessary in the library.  Secondly, the library must be made “the most attractive place in the school so that students will be naturally drawn to it. 
            The accommodation in the library hall should be sufficient enough to house all the almirahs, and the tables for reading books and papers.
            It should have a seating space to accommodate at least one section of a class.  Again, it should be housed in spacious, well it hall (or room), with the walls suitably coloured and the rooms decorated with flowers and artistically framed pictures and prints of famous paintings.  Good attention must be paid to the outer and inner decoration.  Outside the library-room, must be displayed the jackets of the latest arrivals, the selections from great scholars, thoughts  for the day, the bibliography on some selected topics of current interest, newspaper cuttings and other information regarding the library services.
            The almirahs must be well-designed, well-painted and well-varnished.  Closed almirahs without glass panes, in which books are visible to the reader are useless.
            The Catalogue of the books must be arranged book-wise and author wise, and it must be placed at a suitable place  accessible to all.  The time of the students must not be wasted necessarily for hunting out books of their choice.

            The library must remain open on all the work days, all the day long and at all times.  It should not remain closed during holidays and long vacations when the students must be given the facility of visiting the library at any time according to their leisure.
            The atmosphere in the library should be congenial enough for study purposes.  It should be calm and quite.  Some cosy corners may be provided to the students and the staff for independent study in the library.  Proper attention must be paid to the ventilation and light-arrangements of the library.  The library-room must be airy with a number of windows on all sides.  Dark rooms must not be selected for this purpose.  The library must be provided with adequate furniture like matting for the ground floor, tables and chairs, newspaper desks, back number desks, map stands, bulletin-boards, notice board, card-index cabinets, catalogue counters, and pigeon-holes for keeping extra things at the gate of the library.
 Management of records and registers

            Every institution has to maintain certain records, reports, files and register which show its origin, growth and development, its present and past conditions, its efficiency and usefulness and also its main aspirations and achievements.  The school also is a social institution.  It is answerable to parents who send their children to it for receiving education, to local and state governments which maintain it, to society of which it is an organized agency and to pupils who must be developed physically, intellectually, mentally, socially and culturally through its programmes, functions and activities.  All this makes the keeping and maintaining of records very essential.  It not only constitutes an important measure of the effectiveness of school system but also an important aspect of administration.

            It is very difficult to lay down hard and fast rules for the maintenance and use of school records.  However, some useful suggestions are given below:

·         A stock list of all the records and registers be prepared and
·         maintained in each school
·         On the outer cover of each register or file, containing the records,
·         the name of the school, the serial number of register or record, the name of the register or file, the number of the volume, the number of pages of the volume and the dates of opening and closing the volume, should be clearly mentioned.
·         Whenever a new register or file is opened, its page should be
·         numbered consecutively, either in red ink or with  a numbering machine.
·         All the files and registers should be kept quite neat and tidy.  There should be as few cuttings and over-writings as possible.  Whenever corrections are to be made a lien should be drawn through the wrong-figure or entry.  Under no circumstances it is to be scratched.  Each correction should be initialed by the head of the office or institution
·         A new volumes of a register or file should not be opened every year if the older one still contains some blank pages.  No blank space should be left.  All entries should be made in ink and all registers and files should be checked periodically.
                                                                                                     
It should, however, be noted that the ultimate responsibility of maintaining and preserving school records and registers lies upon the Headmaster.  Since he remains extremely busy in discharging multifarious duties, connected with his post, it is essential that each high or higher secondary school should be provided with separate whole time clerk for the school office.
Kinds of School Records, Registers and Reports

            Every state has prescribed a number of records, registers and reports which a secondary school is expected to keep and preserve. These can be broadly classified under the following heads:
A. General

1.      The school calendar
2.      Log book
3.      Visitors book
4.      Service books of teachers and other employees
5.      Staff duty register
6.      Staff address register
7.      Teachers personal file

B. Financial

1.      Salary register of Acquaintance-roll
2.      Contingency register
3.      Cash book
4.      Fee-collection register
5.      Bills register
6.      Government grants register
7.      Contingent orders book
8.      Register of receipts and disbursement of scholarships
9.      Donations register
10.  Ledger showing receipts and expenditure
11.  Students and register.

C. Equipment :

1.      Stock book of furniture and appliances
2.      Furniture issue register
3.      Stationery stock register
4.      Stationery issue register
5.      Sport register
6.      Library accession register
7.      Library issue register
8.      Journals and newspaper register
9.      Library catalogue
10.  Crafts stock register

D. Correspondence:

1.      Receipt and dispatch register
2.      Departmental orders, circular file
3.      Leave register
4.      Memo book

E. Educational

            (a) Dealing with curriculum and daily work:

1.                      Class time-table
2.                      Teachers time-table
3.                      General time-table
4.                      Monthly and term-wise programme of work
5.                      Teachers diaries
6.                      Home-work register
7.                      Teachers free periods time-table
8.                      Activities allotment register

          (b) Dealing with admission and attendance :

1.      Admission register
2.      Pupils attendance register
3.      Teacher’s attendance register
4.      Withdrawal and transfer certificate register
5.       
          (c) Dealing with examinations:
1.      Monthly progress register
2.      Annual examination result register
3.      Departmental examinations result register
4.      Cumulative record register
Management of School Hostel

                                There is no gain saying the fact that a good hostel plays a very important role in education.  By supplying right conditions for the development of the whole personality of the Individual child, it plays a vital role in the education of the whole man.   A child is not born human.  But he possesses, in latest form, certain potentialities and is endowed with the power of growth.  It is the function and concern of education to develop those latest qualities in the child and original nature  into human nature.  This function of education can best be achieved by providing the child a decent hostel, shape his life, which may help him to develop such qualities as are desirable and cube those which are undesirable.  Hostel life provides conditions for sharpening mental faculties and fostering intellectual discipline.  It develops such qualities as emotional maturity, moral courage, broad mindedness, toleration, sympathy, co-operation, humanitarianism and flexibility.  In short, it helps greatly in socializing and humanizing pupils, in the school charge.

                                A good school hostel is a substitute for home in the real senses.  It may even function as better home, providing even those facilities and comforts  which are not available in ordinary homes.  It is, therefore, that a school hostel should be planed with care and caution.  It should be constructed at a small distance from the school, neither too far, nor too close, in an open space.  It should lie in a corner, away from the main road.  It should have good sanitary and hygienic conditions together with an adequate compound or play-ground for outdoor games and sports.

1. Building and Equipment:

                                The type and design of hostel building depends upon the number of students to be accommodate as well as upon the land available.  But it is desirable to have a single-storeyed building, quadrangular in shape and with a courtyard or compound at the centre.

                                In a school hostel big dormitories are preferable to cubicles or even two-seated and three-seated rooms.  In dormitories not only effective supervision of young children is possible, they are also less likely to run into mischief.  These dormitories are constructed on the three sides of the quadrangle and the kitchens and the dinning hall, on the fourth side. 

                                In addition to dormitories, a good school hostel is also provided with the following rooms:

1.      Common room, for indoor games like chess, cards, table tennis etc.  A radio set is also a must for every common room
2.      Reading room, for newspapers, journals, magazines and other reading material for leisure time.
3.      Guest room, accommodating essential guests or parents of pupils
4.      Visitors room, for accommodating occasional relatives, friends and others
5.      Sick room, for segregating cases of illness and for looking after them carefully and properly
6.      Dispensary, for providing first and small scale medical aid to hostellers.

2. Physical Environment:

                                The physical environment of the school hostel should be such as may crate the desired way of life.  For purposes of privacy and quietness, the hostel building should be provided with appropriate insulations.  Door should be provided with stoppers.

3. Mess Arrangements:

                                Mess arrangements are made in the school hostel through employed servants.   Menu is prepared on weekly or fort nightly basis by mess committee of students, under the guidance of the hostel superintendent.  Usually two meals, one in the morning and one in the evening, along with breakfast and evening tea are served in the hostel. It is an ideal arrangement if one tuck shop can also be provided in the hostel or school premises.  Only healthy and balanced diet should be served in the hostel on reasonable rates.  Meals should not be reserve din the room except on special occasions. Every one must take his meals in the dining hall, along with others.  It will not only inculcate community and corporate life amongst pupils but will go a long way in teaching table manners and social etiquettes.

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