“We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure

Massive school closures are occurring in urban school districts across the United States. Research suggests that school closures are the outcome of racialized neoliberal policies and decades of disinvestment that have left many urban districts with fiscal deficits and declining student enrollments....

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Main Author: Terrance Green
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2017-03-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2549
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spelling doaj-e133965bc56e4a769f4a058ebe2e68442020-11-25T02:49:19ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412017-03-0125010.14507/epaa.25.25491592“We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closureTerrance Green0University of Texas at AustinMassive school closures are occurring in urban school districts across the United States. Research suggests that school closures are the outcome of racialized neoliberal policies and decades of disinvestment that have left many urban districts with fiscal deficits and declining student enrollments. However, some urban communities have successfully organized against school closures and reopened neighborhood schools. As such, this study examines how leaders in a community-university coalition in the Midwestern United States reopened a high school that was closed by its district. This case study draws on interviews and document data, and describes the forces that promoted school closure and its impacts on the community. Concepts from social capital and social network theories are used to guide the analysis. Findings indicate these leaders leveraged networks to negotiate a community-university social contract, took strategic and socially connected actions, and formed a community-driven education task force. This study offers implications for policy, future research, and communities in similar contexts.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2549School closuresshared leadershipschool-community engagementurban school reformcommunity-based education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Terrance Green
spellingShingle Terrance Green
“We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
Education Policy Analysis Archives
School closures
shared leadership
school-community engagement
urban school reform
community-based education
author_facet Terrance Green
author_sort Terrance Green
title “We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
title_short “We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
title_full “We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
title_fullStr “We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
title_full_unstemmed “We felt they took the heart out of the community”: Examining a community-based response to urban school closure
title_sort “we felt they took the heart out of the community”: examining a community-based response to urban school closure
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Massive school closures are occurring in urban school districts across the United States. Research suggests that school closures are the outcome of racialized neoliberal policies and decades of disinvestment that have left many urban districts with fiscal deficits and declining student enrollments. However, some urban communities have successfully organized against school closures and reopened neighborhood schools. As such, this study examines how leaders in a community-university coalition in the Midwestern United States reopened a high school that was closed by its district. This case study draws on interviews and document data, and describes the forces that promoted school closure and its impacts on the community. Concepts from social capital and social network theories are used to guide the analysis. Findings indicate these leaders leveraged networks to negotiate a community-university social contract, took strategic and socially connected actions, and formed a community-driven education task force. This study offers implications for policy, future research, and communities in similar contexts.
topic School closures
shared leadership
school-community engagement
urban school reform
community-based education
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2549
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