Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools

Public and nonprofit organizations, entwined in the delivery of public goods and services, are in the midst of challenging economic times. In these circumstances, sound collaborative leadership may help bridge budget and program service delivery shortfalls. In this paper, we examine the administrati...

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Main Authors: Laurie Paarlberg, Rebecca Nesbit, Richard Clerkin, Robert Christensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-05-01
Series:Administrative Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/4/2/120
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spelling doaj-0fb24b36f0cb4760bd00218891473d852020-11-24T22:01:17ZengMDPI AGAdministrative Sciences2076-33872014-05-014212013610.3390/admsci4020120admsci4020120Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public SchoolsLaurie Paarlberg0Rebecca Nesbit1Richard Clerkin2Robert Christensen3Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77843, USADepartment of Public Administration and Policy, School of Public and International Affairs, 204 Baldwin Hall, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-1615, USAPublic Administration Department, School of Public and International Affairs, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-8102, USADepartment of Public Administration and Policy, School of Public and International Affairs, 406 Baldwin Hall, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-1615, USAPublic and nonprofit organizations, entwined in the delivery of public goods and services, are in the midst of challenging economic times. In these circumstances, sound collaborative leadership may help bridge budget and program service delivery shortfalls. In this paper, we examine the administrative dynamics of mutual reliance between two prominent public and nonprofit organizations: public schools and parent-teacher groups (PTGs). We conclude that the partnership is changing as a result of external, economic forces. In essence, we are seeing a threat-rigidity response. The economic crisis may be responsible for causing PTGs to narrow their range of activities away from broader strategic issues that can be addressed through their confrontation activities and advocacy mission towards a narrower focus on classroom activities that protect core school operations, namely instruction.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/4/2/120nonprofit leadershipcollaborationschoolsparent teacher organizationsgroups
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laurie Paarlberg
Rebecca Nesbit
Richard Clerkin
Robert Christensen
spellingShingle Laurie Paarlberg
Rebecca Nesbit
Richard Clerkin
Robert Christensen
Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
Administrative Sciences
nonprofit leadership
collaboration
schools
parent teacher organizations
groups
author_facet Laurie Paarlberg
Rebecca Nesbit
Richard Clerkin
Robert Christensen
author_sort Laurie Paarlberg
title Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
title_short Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
title_full Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
title_fullStr Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
title_full_unstemmed Leading, Following or Complementing in Economic Crisis: A Conceptual Model Illustrating Nonprofit Relationships with Public Schools
title_sort leading, following or complementing in economic crisis: a conceptual model illustrating nonprofit relationships with public schools
publisher MDPI AG
series Administrative Sciences
issn 2076-3387
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Public and nonprofit organizations, entwined in the delivery of public goods and services, are in the midst of challenging economic times. In these circumstances, sound collaborative leadership may help bridge budget and program service delivery shortfalls. In this paper, we examine the administrative dynamics of mutual reliance between two prominent public and nonprofit organizations: public schools and parent-teacher groups (PTGs). We conclude that the partnership is changing as a result of external, economic forces. In essence, we are seeing a threat-rigidity response. The economic crisis may be responsible for causing PTGs to narrow their range of activities away from broader strategic issues that can be addressed through their confrontation activities and advocacy mission towards a narrower focus on classroom activities that protect core school operations, namely instruction.
topic nonprofit leadership
collaboration
schools
parent teacher organizations
groups
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/4/2/120
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AT richardclerkin leadingfollowingorcomplementingineconomiccrisisaconceptualmodelillustratingnonprofitrelationshipswithpublicschools
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