TY - JOUR
T1 - Governments, markets, and instruction
T2 - considerations for cross-national research
AU - Peurach, Donald J.
AU - Cohen, David K.
AU - Spillane, James P.
N1 - Funding Information:
Work on this paper was supported by the Spencer Systems Study at Northwestern University and University of Michigan, funded by a research grant from the Spencer Foundation (SP0034639-201600066). The authors gratefully acknowledge those who shared comments on earlier manuscripts and presentations on which the paper draws, as well as the members of the research team: Naomi Blaushild, Kathryn Gabriele, Daniella Hall Sutherland, Whitney Hegseth, Christine M. Neumerski, Melissa Ortiz, Jennifer Seelig and Maxwell Yurkofsky. All opinions and conclusions expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of any funding agency.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2019/6/26
Y1 - 2019/6/26
N2 - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine relationships among governmental organizations, non-governmental organizations and the organization and management of instruction in US public education, with the aim of raising issues for cross-national research among countries in which the involvement of non-governmental organizations is increasing. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is structured in four parts: an historical analysis of the architecture and dynamics of US public education; an analysis of contemporary reform efforts seeking to improve quality and reduce inequities; an analysis of ways that legacy and reform dynamics manifest in two US public school districts; and a discussion of considerations for cross-national research. Findings: In US public education, dependence on non-governmental organizations for instructional resources and services is anchored in deeply institutionalized social, political and economic values dating to the country’s founding and that continue to function as constraints on educational reform, such that new solutions always emerge in-and-from the same problematic conditions that they seek to redress. The consequence is that reform takes on an evolutionary (vs transformative) character. Research limitations/implications: The US case provides a foundation for framing issues for cross-national research comparing among macro-level educational infrastructures, patterns of instructional organization and classroom instruction. Originality/value: Such research would move beyond reductionist approaches to cross-national research toward new approaches that examine how histories, legacy architectures, contemporary reforms and patterns of instructional organization and management interact to shape students’ day-to-day lives in classrooms.
AB - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine relationships among governmental organizations, non-governmental organizations and the organization and management of instruction in US public education, with the aim of raising issues for cross-national research among countries in which the involvement of non-governmental organizations is increasing. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is structured in four parts: an historical analysis of the architecture and dynamics of US public education; an analysis of contemporary reform efforts seeking to improve quality and reduce inequities; an analysis of ways that legacy and reform dynamics manifest in two US public school districts; and a discussion of considerations for cross-national research. Findings: In US public education, dependence on non-governmental organizations for instructional resources and services is anchored in deeply institutionalized social, political and economic values dating to the country’s founding and that continue to function as constraints on educational reform, such that new solutions always emerge in-and-from the same problematic conditions that they seek to redress. The consequence is that reform takes on an evolutionary (vs transformative) character. Research limitations/implications: The US case provides a foundation for framing issues for cross-national research comparing among macro-level educational infrastructures, patterns of instructional organization and classroom instruction. Originality/value: Such research would move beyond reductionist approaches to cross-national research toward new approaches that examine how histories, legacy architectures, contemporary reforms and patterns of instructional organization and management interact to shape students’ day-to-day lives in classrooms.
KW - Education governance
KW - Education markets
KW - Education systems
KW - Educational infrastructure
KW - Instructional improvement
KW - Instructional organization and management
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U2 - 10.1108/JEA-09-2018-0172
DO - 10.1108/JEA-09-2018-0172
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85063320512
SN - 0957-8234
VL - 57
SP - 393
EP - 410
JO - Journal of Educational Administration
JF - Journal of Educational Administration
IS - 4
ER -