Puerto Rico to decentralise its Education Department in bid to improve services
Puerto Rico’s Education Department, long considered a bureaucratic behemoth, will be decentralised serve students better, officials said Monday.
The announcement comes amid continuing criticism that the department is inefficient, corrupt and struggling to stem an increase in dropouts.
“We want the day-to-day decisions to be made at the regional level and the resources to reach our children directly,” Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi said.
U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona travelled to the U.S. territory for the announcement and said he supports the change to overcome the system’s challenges.
Officials must outline and submit a decentralisation plan to the governor and the island’s education secretary within three months. The change is expected to help deploy federal resources more quickly to where needed and give regions and schools more autonomy.
Puerto Rico has the sixth-largest school district in U.S. jurisdiction. The island of 3.2 million people has 850 schools, 225,000 students and 25,000 teachers.
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