“It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes

Mass school closures have become commonplace in urban school districts. To explain their actions, school system leaders often rely on a dominant frame that presents closures as an inevitable, data-driven, and politically neutral phenomenon in an educational landscape defined by shrinking budgets, de...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Esa Syeed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2019-09-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4240
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spelling doaj-538b4f7c2a05404b8543cbd329d052942020-11-25T03:56:13ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412019-09-0127010.14507/epaa.27.42401973“It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframesEsa Syeed0California State University-Long BeachMass school closures have become commonplace in urban school districts. To explain their actions, school system leaders often rely on a dominant frame that presents closures as an inevitable, data-driven, and politically neutral phenomenon in an educational landscape defined by shrinking budgets, demographic changes, and increased school choice. In response, research has typically focused on how communities tell counternarratives that seek to interrupt official accounts of school closures. Using a critical frame analysis of qualitative data from the 2013 school closure process in Washington, DC, I discuss another grassroots approach to disrupting school closures: counterframes. Drawing on Critical Race Theory and social movement theory, I discuss counterframes as discursive arguments that allow communities to directly challenge official rhetoric and offer alternatives. Findings show that communities in DC crafted counterframes that pushed back on the notion that the closures were inevitable, questioned the data guiding the process, and attempted to expose hidden agendas and interests behind shuttering schools. The article concludes with the relevance of counterframes to broader educational mobilizations as well as their limitations.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4240school closuresurban school reformsocial movementsframing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esa Syeed
spellingShingle Esa Syeed
“It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
Education Policy Analysis Archives
school closures
urban school reform
social movements
framing
author_facet Esa Syeed
author_sort Esa Syeed
title “It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
title_short “It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
title_full “It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
title_fullStr “It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
title_full_unstemmed “It just doesn’t add up”: Disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
title_sort “it just doesn’t add up”: disrupting official arguments for urban school closures with counterframes
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Mass school closures have become commonplace in urban school districts. To explain their actions, school system leaders often rely on a dominant frame that presents closures as an inevitable, data-driven, and politically neutral phenomenon in an educational landscape defined by shrinking budgets, demographic changes, and increased school choice. In response, research has typically focused on how communities tell counternarratives that seek to interrupt official accounts of school closures. Using a critical frame analysis of qualitative data from the 2013 school closure process in Washington, DC, I discuss another grassroots approach to disrupting school closures: counterframes. Drawing on Critical Race Theory and social movement theory, I discuss counterframes as discursive arguments that allow communities to directly challenge official rhetoric and offer alternatives. Findings show that communities in DC crafted counterframes that pushed back on the notion that the closures were inevitable, questioned the data guiding the process, and attempted to expose hidden agendas and interests behind shuttering schools. The article concludes with the relevance of counterframes to broader educational mobilizations as well as their limitations.
topic school closures
urban school reform
social movements
framing
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4240
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