Publication | Closed Access
The Heart of the Matter: How Reforms Unsettle Organizational Identity
25
Citations
31
References
2019
Year
Educational OutcomesEducationOrganizational CultureOrganization ScienceOrganizational BehaviorElementary EducationEducational EquitySociology Of EducationSocial Contexts Of EducationManagementEducational AdministrationUrban Catholic SystemSocial IdentityEducational LeadershipOrganizational TransformationEqual Educational OpportunityPublic EducationPublic School SystemsOrganizational IdentityOrganizational CommunicationOrganization DevelopmentSociologySocial Foundations Of EducationOrganization TheorySocial FoundationsBusinessNew Education SectorEducation ReformEducation PolicyFoundations Of Education
The identity of public school systems changed dramatically over the past 25 years, as standards-based reform held schools accountable for more equal and academically demanding education for poorer and more diverse students. We argue that identity also changed in private and hybrid school systems. Drawing on semistructured interviews with 40 school system leaders, we examine the ways in which three different school systems – a Montessori, Center, an urban Catholic system, and the International Baccalaureate – responded to the new conditions that reforms, poverty, and migration brought to the United States. We find that leaders perceived the identity of their systems as changing, as they questioned how much the systems should adapt to the new education sector.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1