School Governance: Who Actually Runs the System
How authority over schools is split across state law, local boards, and bureaucratic oversight—and why no one actor fully controls outcomes.
Schools feel local. Kids attend neighborhood campuses. Parents vote for school board members. Principals are visible and familiar. But the power that shapes what schools can actually do—how money is spent, who can be hired, what must be taught, and how performance is judged—mostly sits elsewhere. Modern school governance is a layered system, built to limit discretion, distribute responsibility, and enforce compliance across multiple levels of government.
Understanding that structure explains why change is slow, uneven, and often frustrating, even when everyone involved appears to agree on the goal.
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School governance is the structure that determines who has authority over funding, curriculum, staffing, accountability, and operations in public education.
In California, that authority is intentionally fragmented. Power is spread across the state legislature, the California Department of Education, county offices of education, local school boards, and district administrators. Each layer controls different levers. No single entity “runs” schools end to end.
The result is a system where responsibility is shared, but control is partial.
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At the top, the state sets the rules. California law defines funding formulas, graduation requirements, testing mandates, labor protections, and reporting obligations. These rules are binding. Local actors cannot opt out.
Money flows downward through state-designed formulas, primarily the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). Funds arrive with conditions, required plans, and accountability metrics attached.
School districts then allocate budgets, negotiate labor contracts, and adopt curricula—but only within the constraints set by state law and available funding. County offices of education review district budgets, monitor fiscal health, and can intervene when districts fail to meet financial or academic standards.
Federal requirements add another layer, particularly around civil rights enforcement, special education, and testing.
Each layer checks the next. Flexibility exists, but it is bounded. Innovation is permitted only inside the guardrails.
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Different decisions are made by different actors:
State legislators and state education agencies define the rules that shape nearly every major choice districts face. Local school boards vote on budgets, contracts, and policies, but cannot override state mandates. County offices of education act as fiscal and compliance monitors, with intervention authority when districts falter. Superintendents and principals implement decisions but operate inside legal, financial, and contractual limits they did not create.
Authority is real at each level, but incomplete at all of them.
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This structure determines class sizes, program availability, staffing stability, and the condition of school facilities.
It explains why neighboring districts can look radically different despite serving similar populations. It explains why principals often say they lack flexibility, even when problems are obvious. It explains why reforms move slowly and why blame is easy to assign but hard to pin down.
Families experience the outcomes of governance decisions made far beyond the school building—often without realizing where those decisions originated.
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These sources document how public school governance, funding, and oversight are structured in California and the United States.
California Department of Education. California School Governance and Administration (n.d.).
https://www.cde.ca.gov/re/di/or/overview.aspCalifornia Legislative Analyst’s Office. How California’s Local Control Funding Formula Works (2023).
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3726Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC). Who’s in Charge of California Schools? (2017).
https://www.ppic.org/publication/whos-in-charge-of-californias-schools/U.S. Department of Education. State and Local Roles in Education Governance (2020).
https://www2.ed.gov/about/overview/fed/role.html
