ID: 517 / 23 SES 07 A: 1
23. Policy Studies and Politics of Education
Paper
Alternative EERA Network: 19.
Ethnography
Topics: NW 23: The
politics of policy making in education
Keywords: policy
enactment, students, school establishment, vision
Students as Policy Actors - the Student Perspective
in the Establishment Process of a New School
Ingrid
Bosseldal1, Katarina Blennow1,
Martin Malmström2
1Lund University, Sweden; 2Malmö University, Sweden
Presenting Author: Bosseldal, Ingrid; Blennow, Katarina
When
a new school is established, the role of the students is of decisive
importance (Blennow et al, 2021; forthcoming). They may buy into the ideas
and visions presented. They may show resistance. They may even be totally
indifferent or uninformed. In any case, the students’ reactions and actions
on policy initiatives are crucial in the creation of a school culture or
campus ethos. In policy enactment research however, there is a tendency to
overlook the students’ role as policy actors (Tanner, 2016).
This
paper draws on an ongoing study, where we investigate the policy enactment
processes that are set in motion at the establishment of a new, strongly
profiled municipal upper secondary school (Blennow et al 2021; forthcoming).
The school is situated in a marketized educational landscape in a middle
range Swedish university town. It has an entrepreneurial approach and a
“challenge-driven” pedagogy and the vision of the school goes like this:
“We
solve the challenges of the future now – with knowledge and creativity”.
Given
the assumptions above, this paper focuses the student perspective in the
establishment process of the school. The questions we seek to answer are:
How do students take part when the
vision of the new school is enacted?
How can the student perspective
contribute to policy enactment theory?
To
answer the research questions, we use policy enactment theory. The theory offers
a perspective on policy as something that institutions as schools do (Ball et
al 2012). Policies usually aim to prevent or solve problems and have people
as their objects. Simultaneously they produce policy subjects: the ones that
are supposed to enact the policy. Seeing policy as something enacted, instead
of implemented, entails that policy is continuously translated, transformed
and negotiated by different actors in social interaction (Maguire et al,
2011; Ball et al 2011a; b; 2012; Braun et al 2011 a; b).
In
our analysis we use a perspective on policies as either imperative or
exhortative (Ball et al, 2011a), that is, as either something to obey or
something that can be used by policy translators in a creative way. We also
draw on their gallery of different roles in the policy enactment process
(Ball et al 2011b, 2012). Different actors take different roles but are also
placed in different subject positions in relation to the problem a certain
policy is created to solve (Bacci, 2009).
We
are especially interested in how the students relate to the vision of the
school, adapt to it, ignore it or make resistance to it, and how they in some
cases come to represent different positions and belong to different
coalitions. Some previous research has addressed the role of students in
relation to policy and viewed the policy enactment process from the student´s
frame of reference. For instance, Tanner (2016) study a process where
students are both policy subjects and objects, Löfgren et al (2018) frame students
as policy translators and Rönnberg (2014) shows how students use policy to
benefit their own interests.
Methodology, Methods, Research Instruments or Sources Used
In the paper we analyse two student cases, which
are chosen as examples of radically different student positions in the
enactment of the policy of the school. The data used in the analysis are
fieldnotes, transcribed interviews and a survey with all the third-year
students at the school in the spring of 2021.
The data used in this paper is part of the
material gathered for the ongoing study of the establishment of the school.
We have studied the school since its start in 2018. Ethnographic methodology
is used to capture social interactions, focusing on power and resistance,
conflicts and conflict management, the school as a physical meeting-place,
emotions and emotional labor. Much time is spent in the environment, in order
to get as wide a perspective as possible, collaborate with the staff, and get
behind the scenes. We conduct observations of both planned and formal
activities, such as instruction and meetings, and we “shadow” whole
work/school days focusing on informal processes and unforeseen events
(Czarniawska, 2007). Observations and shadowing are alternated with
semi-structured interviews, to better understand the participants’
interactions, feelings and thoughts, as well as widening and controlling the
interpretations of the observations (Cohen, Manion & Morrison, 2011).
To study the relation between the vision of the
school and the community and society at large, different kinds of documents,
such as protocols from the City Council, local documents, information
booklets, media texts, and marketing material are analysed. Using critical
discourse analytical methods (Fairclough, 1992), the texts are related to
local and global contexts.
Conclusions, Expected Outcomes or Findings
When the school opened in 2018, the staff lined up
for the vision. But the students turned out to be a more diversified group than
expected, making evident that the utopian vision had cracks. A group of
students refused to engage in school projects built on the vision. Other
students became advocates of the school and vision.
Despite the turbulence of the first years, the
vision did not change. The school started in preliminary premises, and it
seems that the vision has been preserved while the staff is waiting for the
permanent and pedagogically adapted school building.
The character of the vision is exhortative, with
some imperative aspects. By including all actors, whether they want it or
not, in a “We”, as in “We solve the challenges of the future now ...”, the
vision imposes itself on everyone who belongs to the school and expect of
them to make a creative translation into action. It seems to announce that
being a teacher or student at this school also means being a part of the
vision.
Teachers and students tell different stories about
the first years. Where teachers see resistance, lack of interest and great
needs of pedagogical support in the student body, the students contribute to
a richer and more complex answer to what has happened. The roles they take in
relation to the vision differs significantly.
The analysis of the two student cases offers
insights into the complexity of this role taking and makes visible how
students can take the role as enthusiasts, while silently or in closed rooms
simultaneously being critics.
Preliminary answers to our research questions are
that students in our case are important policy actors and that the reflection
on the enactment processes become more complex and multifaceted when the
students' perspectives are included.
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