Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context

Education laws and policies have moved toward promoting socio-emotional (SEL) skills, adopting numerous terminologies in their standards. However, the incremental change has left compensatory education practitioners who are committed to promoting SEL opportunities with little guidance when the progr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Raquel Muñiz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2020-08-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5235
id doaj-4e3d8ae3e7e24503b80b37610c5cab14
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4e3d8ae3e7e24503b80b37610c5cab142021-02-23T00:48:21ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412020-08-0128010.14507/epaa.28.52352137Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy contextRaquel Muñiz0Boston CollegeEducation laws and policies have moved toward promoting socio-emotional (SEL) skills, adopting numerous terminologies in their standards. However, the incremental change has left compensatory education practitioners who are committed to promoting SEL opportunities with little guidance when the programs’ governing policies do not include language acknowledging the importance of SEL to student success. Additionally, the ongoing debate in the SEL field about which taxonomies might best capture the skills and the lack of conceptual clarity offers these practitioners little additional guidance. Drawing on sensemaking theory, this case study examined how practitioners in a compensatory education program made sense of SEL skills through their practice. The study used a case-based design with multiple methods, namely, document review, observations, and pre- and post-program semi-structured interviews. The study employed sensemaking theory and CASEL’s SEL framework in the thematic analysis of the documents, observations, and interviews to understand how practitioners made sense of the concept of SEL. The findings indicate three key aspects important in the practitioners’ sensemaking process: the local environment established by the federal policy and the leaders’ policy interpretation, which emphasized the importance of SEL skills; their articulation of their conceptualization of SEL skills at the beginning of the program; and the usefulness of an SEL skills conceptual framework. I discuss the policy and equity implications at the federal and local level.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5235compensatory educationeducational legislationpolicypraxisqualitative researcheducational equity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raquel Muñiz
spellingShingle Raquel Muñiz
Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
Education Policy Analysis Archives
compensatory education
educational legislation
policy
praxis
qualitative research
educational equity
author_facet Raquel Muñiz
author_sort Raquel Muñiz
title Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
title_short Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
title_full Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
title_fullStr Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
title_full_unstemmed Muddy sensemaking: Making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
title_sort muddy sensemaking: making sense of socio-emotional skills amidst a vague policy context
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Education laws and policies have moved toward promoting socio-emotional (SEL) skills, adopting numerous terminologies in their standards. However, the incremental change has left compensatory education practitioners who are committed to promoting SEL opportunities with little guidance when the programs’ governing policies do not include language acknowledging the importance of SEL to student success. Additionally, the ongoing debate in the SEL field about which taxonomies might best capture the skills and the lack of conceptual clarity offers these practitioners little additional guidance. Drawing on sensemaking theory, this case study examined how practitioners in a compensatory education program made sense of SEL skills through their practice. The study used a case-based design with multiple methods, namely, document review, observations, and pre- and post-program semi-structured interviews. The study employed sensemaking theory and CASEL’s SEL framework in the thematic analysis of the documents, observations, and interviews to understand how practitioners made sense of the concept of SEL. The findings indicate three key aspects important in the practitioners’ sensemaking process: the local environment established by the federal policy and the leaders’ policy interpretation, which emphasized the importance of SEL skills; their articulation of their conceptualization of SEL skills at the beginning of the program; and the usefulness of an SEL skills conceptual framework. I discuss the policy and equity implications at the federal and local level.
topic compensatory education
educational legislation
policy
praxis
qualitative research
educational equity
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5235
work_keys_str_mv AT raquelmuniz muddysensemakingmakingsenseofsocioemotionalskillsamidstavaguepolicycontext
_version_ 1724255246165737472