Content area

Abstract

Guided by theories of institutions, organizations, and sense-making, this manuscript examines how public, charter, and Catholic school staff in a large urban area organize for instruction and respond to educational change. To build theory about institutional processes of “organizing” from participants’ perspectives, data included a survey regarding staff networks (N = 271) and semi-structured, qualitative interviews (n = 49). Findings demonstrate that all 11 schools in this study reflected the current reform environment with its focus on managing instruction. However, staff from different kinds of schools organized in distinct ways. Most charter and Catholic school staff described obtaining information about instruction through “organic” relationships using the metaphor of family to define their work situations. Alternatively, public schools tended to be “mechanistic,” with staff viewing themselves as professionals who were focused on standards and testing. One charter school, however, combined organic and mechanistic characteristics demonstrating the contagion that occurs among organizations in the same institutional sector and the reach that institutional policy scripts, such as No Child Left Behind, have in changing instructional practice at all kinds of schools.

Details

Title
Organizing for instruction: A comparative study of public, charter, and Catholic schools
Author
Dorner, Lisa M 1 ; Spillane, James P 2 ; Pustejovsky, James 2 

 College of Education, University of Missouri, St. Louis, MO, USA 
 Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA 
Pages
71-98
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Feb 2011
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
13892843
e-ISSN
15731812
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2302299665
Copyright
Journal of Educational Change is a copyright of Springer, (2010). All Rights Reserved.