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Eurydice

EACEA National Policies Platform:Eurydice
Management and other education staff
Poland

Poland

9.Management and other education staff

Last update: 5 June 2025

Care for children aged up to 3 years

Crèches, kids’ clubs, day-care providers and nannies form a separate system of care for children aged up to 3 years, which is not linked to the education system (see also childcare settings in Chapter 3 ‘Early childhood education and care’). For general information about day-care providers and nannies, see Chapter 3.5 ‘Home-based provision’; for details about the two types of childcare settings, see Chapter 8 ‘Teachers and education staff’, sections 8.1 to 8.3 on initial education, conditions of service and continuing professional development of teachers working in early childhood and school education).  

Pursuant to the national legislation, a crèche or a kids’ club is managed by its head. The head, together with the staff taking care of children, is also responsible for the quality of childcare. The legislation sets out qualification requirements, general tasks and conditions of service for heads. 

External supervision of crèches, kids’ clubs and day-care providers is the responsibility of a local government body at the level of commune (the lowest-level local government unit). Staff authorised by such a body carry out inspections at childcare institutions, which cover all of their activities. As the legislation has established childcare standards, inspections to be conducted after 1 January 2026 will also cover compliance with the so-called essential standards. For the standards, see Chapter 10.1 ‘Quality assurance in early childhood and school education’.

The legislation does not provide for the employment of staff responsible for counselling or psychological support at childcare institutions. As part of his/her responsibilities, a childminder or a day-care provider working at a crèche or kids’ club collaborates with parents, providing information and advice regarding their work with children. 

Where the number of children is higher than specified in the legislation, a crèche additionally employs a nurse or midwife. 

Preschool and school education

The same arrangements are in place for management staff, staff monitoring educational quality and staff responsible for guidance in preschool education and school education. The national legislation sets out qualification requirements, responsibilities and conditions of service for management staff in public nursery schools, schools and other educational institutions, staff responsible for the monitoring of educational quality and guidance, and other staff. 

A nursery school or school (or another educational institution) is managed by the head who can be either a teacher or a non-teaching head (a so-called head-manager). In addition to his/her duties as the head of staff, the head is responsible for, for example, the organisation of work; pedagogical supervision, including inspections or audits, and teacher performance appraisal as part of internal quality assurance; the organisation of psychological and educational support; and continuing professional development of teachers. See also Chapter 10.1 ‘Quality assurance in early childhood and school education’. 

External supervision of nursery schools and schools (and other educational institutions) is the responsibility of the ministry in charge of school education (or another ministry overseeing specific types of schools such as agricultural schools) and the Regional Education Authority (REA) in a given province. Inspectors working in the ministries and the REAs conduct inspections in educational institutions which are part of the school education system. See also Chapter 10.1 ‘Quality assurance in early childhood and school education’. 

The following specialists provide guidance in nursery schools and schools, working with pupils, teachers and / or parents: teacher-educationalist and teacher-special education counsellor; teacher-psychologist; teacher-educational therapist; teacher-speech therapist; and teacher-careers adviser. They are classified in the legislation as teachers and are employed under the same conditions as teachers. 

Other staff working in nursery schools and schools are support teachers, who co-provide inclusive education or education for pupils with disabilities, socially maladjusted pupils or those at risk of social maladjustment; teacher assistants who are non-teaching staff supporting teachers in their work with these groups of pupils; and Roma education assistants, who support pupils of the Roma minority and collaborate with teachers and parents. The legislation sets out conditions under which specific types of nursery schools and schools employ such staff. 

Schools also employ teachers-librarians, and school nurses, school hygienists, dental practitioners and dental hygienists have specific responsibilities as part of healthcare services for pupils. 

Higher education

The rector of a higher education institution (HEI) is the only management position (or a single-person authority) referred to in the legislation. However, the statutes of an HEI may provide for other management positions (or single-person authorities), aside from collective governing bodies established by law, and management positions other than the rector. 

As part of his/her powers and responsibilities, the rector manages the institution, including financial management; drafts an institutional strategy and submits reports on its implementation; sets and implements a human resources policy, and appoints and dismisses staff in management positions; and establishes degree programmes and doctoral schools. The rector carries out his/her duties in collaboration with the collective bodies of an HEI. 

Within their autonomy in the area of monitoring educational quality or internal quality assurance, HEIs put in place various organisational arrangements; for example, they appoint the rector’s representative or a committee or establish a unit for quality assurance. They also independently define responsibilities and qualification requirements for such representatives, committee members or staff. External quality assurance is the responsibility of the Polish Accreditation Committee; see Chapter 10.2 'Quality assurance in higher education'. 

The legislation on higher education does not address career guidance or psychological counselling. Based on their internal regulations, HEIs have established careers offices which employ careers advisers and administrative staff, and psychological counselling services which employ qualified psychologists and psychotherapists. 

Adult education

Adult education is provided both within and outside the school education system. The school education system includes the following types of adult education institutions: schools for adults, stage II sectoral vocational schools and post-secondary schools, which take learners aged at least 18 years, and specific types of other educational institutions. Outside the education system, various entities provide adult education as part of economic activity or labour-market training activity.

Heads manage schools and other institutions providing adult education within the school education system, and the arrangements for staff responsible for management and pedagogical supervision or educational quality monitoring are the same as in preschool and school education. Like for preschool and school education, external pedagogical supervision is the responsibility of the competent ministries and the REAs, and inspections are conducted by REA inspectors. 

Schools for adults and other adult education providers within the school education system also employ teachers-careers advisers

There are no specific regulations on staff for entities which provide adult education outside the school education system. Such entities employ their management and other staff based on the generally applicable labour laws and their internal regulations. However, they should demonstrate that they employ qualified staff if they apply, on a voluntary basis, for accreditation awarded by the Head of the REA (see Chapter 10.3, ‘Quality assurance in adult education and training’). 

Legislation 

(Last accessed: 5/06/2025)

NB.: In January 2021 the Ministry of National Education and the Ministry of Science and Higher Education were merged into the Ministry of Education and Science (MES), and the MES was divided into the Ministry of National Education and the Ministry of Science and Higher Education in January 2024. Thus, regulations on school education and higher education were issued by different ministries.  

General legislation

Legislation on the care for children aged up to 3 years

 Legislation on preschool and school education, and adult education within the school education system

Legislation on higher education

  • Act of 20 July 2018, The Law on Higher Education and Science (as subsequently amended) (Ustawa z dnia 20 lipca 2018 r. – Prawo o szkolnictwie wyższym i nauce (z późn. zm.)). The key legislative act for higher education which specifies, among other things, general appointment requirements, employment conditions and the powers and responsibilities of the rector of an HEI, and general requirements for staff holding management positions in an HEI.