National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board

Historically power to govern public schools has been delegated to local school boards. However, this arrangement of power has been shifting over the past half century and increasingly, local school boards are targeted as ineffective and antiquated. Teach For America (TFA), typically examined for its...

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Main Authors: Rebecca Jacobsen, Tamara Wilder Linkow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2014-07-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/1451
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spelling doaj-38d17061bbfb457a8c8b9395d0ee9bed2020-11-25T01:20:24ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412014-07-0122010.14507/epaa.v22n69.20141250National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School BoardRebecca Jacobsen0Tamara Wilder Linkow1Michigan State UniversityAbt AssociatesHistorically power to govern public schools has been delegated to local school boards. However, this arrangement of power has been shifting over the past half century and increasingly, local school boards are targeted as ineffective and antiquated. Teach For America (TFA), typically examined for its placement of teachers, also seeks to develop educational leaders and TFA now encourages and supports its alumni to run for local school boards. The involvement of a national organization, like TFA, with its own national education agenda in local school board elections may reflect the next step in the demise of local control. To investigate whether TFA’s involvement in local elections represents the spreading of a national agenda at the expense of attention to local issues, this research examines campaign messages for both TFA alumni candidates and their opponents. Results indicate that TFA alumni candidates incorporate significantly more messages aligned with TFA than their opponents (35 vs. 11), but they also maintain a focus on local issues as measured by the number of local issue messages they also incorporate into their campaign literature. Rather than debating whether school boards have lost power, this research points to the need to better understand how local politics is changing and expanding as new voices enter the arena.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/1451Sschool board electionsTeach For Americarepresentationpolitics of education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca Jacobsen
Tamara Wilder Linkow
spellingShingle Rebecca Jacobsen
Tamara Wilder Linkow
National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
Education Policy Analysis Archives
Sschool board elections
Teach For America
representation
politics of education
author_facet Rebecca Jacobsen
Tamara Wilder Linkow
author_sort Rebecca Jacobsen
title National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
title_short National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
title_full National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
title_fullStr National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
title_full_unstemmed National Affiliation or Local Representation: When TFA Alumni Run for School Board
title_sort national affiliation or local representation: when tfa alumni run for school board
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Historically power to govern public schools has been delegated to local school boards. However, this arrangement of power has been shifting over the past half century and increasingly, local school boards are targeted as ineffective and antiquated. Teach For America (TFA), typically examined for its placement of teachers, also seeks to develop educational leaders and TFA now encourages and supports its alumni to run for local school boards. The involvement of a national organization, like TFA, with its own national education agenda in local school board elections may reflect the next step in the demise of local control. To investigate whether TFA’s involvement in local elections represents the spreading of a national agenda at the expense of attention to local issues, this research examines campaign messages for both TFA alumni candidates and their opponents. Results indicate that TFA alumni candidates incorporate significantly more messages aligned with TFA than their opponents (35 vs. 11), but they also maintain a focus on local issues as measured by the number of local issue messages they also incorporate into their campaign literature. Rather than debating whether school boards have lost power, this research points to the need to better understand how local politics is changing and expanding as new voices enter the arena.
topic Sschool board elections
Teach For America
representation
politics of education
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/1451
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