TY - JOUR
T1 - Policy Enactment During a Pandemic
T2 - How One School Responded to COVID-19 in Negotiation With a Nonprofit Partner
AU - Dorner, Lisa M.
AU - Harris, Kelly
AU - Willoughby, Blake
N1 - Funding Information:
We sincerely thank the partners of this project from both “Teachers and Families Together” and “Randolph Elementary,” as well as our other coresearcher, for their collegiality, expertise, and help in pulling this together. We remain in awe of the resiliency of neighborhoods and communities, and all the stakeholders we were able to meet through this project, and we hope the analysis here lends toward more equitable policymaking and educational opportunities for the future. We also appreciated the insightful feedback from our blind peer reviewers, as well as our friend, Dr. Lyndsie Schultz.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - Policymaking is not linear or neutral, nor is it ever made or enacted in isolation, especially not during a crisis. Framed by theories on the contextual, interactive nature of policy enactment, this year-long, ethnographic study examined how an urban elementary school and nonprofit organization worked to address challenges made visible by the COVID-19 pandemic. Analyses explored how negotiations among the school, its nonprofit partner, and district shaped pandemic policy responses. Data included 35 transcriptions and eight field notes from stakeholder interviews and principal–partner meetings, and 128 external stakeholder artifacts. Findings showcase the policy enactment of family–school communication and access to remote learning, and limitations of the partnership due to structural and racialized processes. The discussion presents implications for educational policymaking in response to crises, highlighting the need to understand the external contexts and racialized discourses that are part of shaping those responses to be dynamic and “nonlinear.”
AB - Policymaking is not linear or neutral, nor is it ever made or enacted in isolation, especially not during a crisis. Framed by theories on the contextual, interactive nature of policy enactment, this year-long, ethnographic study examined how an urban elementary school and nonprofit organization worked to address challenges made visible by the COVID-19 pandemic. Analyses explored how negotiations among the school, its nonprofit partner, and district shaped pandemic policy responses. Data included 35 transcriptions and eight field notes from stakeholder interviews and principal–partner meetings, and 128 external stakeholder artifacts. Findings showcase the policy enactment of family–school communication and access to remote learning, and limitations of the partnership due to structural and racialized processes. The discussion presents implications for educational policymaking in response to crises, highlighting the need to understand the external contexts and racialized discourses that are part of shaping those responses to be dynamic and “nonlinear.”
KW - COVID-19
KW - crisis management
KW - family engagement
KW - pandemic preparedness
KW - policy enactment
KW - policy implementation
KW - principal leadership
KW - school–community partnerships
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125785171&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/23328584221078328
DO - 10.1177/23328584221078328
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125785171
SN - 2332-8584
VL - 8
JO - AERA Open
JF - AERA Open
ER -