An examination of public discourse about teachers’ collective bargaining rights in a portfolio school district

Authors

  • Anna L. Noble University of Colorado, Boulder

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.8029

Keywords:

critical discourse analysis, institutional logics, autonomous schools, collective bargaining agreements

Abstract

Employing an institutional logics framework and critical discourse analysis, this study examines the discourse of participants in a stakeholder-feedback meeting about a proposal by the Denver Public School board to extend collective bargaining rights to teachers in the district's innovation schools. The findings provide insight into the logics that control how teacher unions and collective bargaining agreements are understood by proponents of autonomous schools and portrayed to the general public through media. The analysis explores how connections to power and status allowed some stakeholder groups to influence the board to revise the policy to one more favorable toward market-oriented school reform. In this case, the dominant narrative that emerged from the stakeholder feedback cycle was one in which the collective bargaining rights of teachers were positioned as a threat to autonomous schools’ ability to provide “what's best for kids” in their classrooms. 

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Author Biography

Anna L. Noble, University of Colorado, Boulder

Anna Noble is a doctoral student in the School of Education at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Her research explores conceptualizations of teachers and teacher unions as they relate to perceptions of school quality, school choice systems, school funding, and school district management. Her dissertation examines the changing role of teacher unions and collective bargaining agreements in a portfolio district. Anna is a science teacher in Denver Public Schools and is an active member of her union.

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Published

2023-11-07

How to Cite

Noble, A. L. (2023). An examination of public discourse about teachers’ collective bargaining rights in a portfolio school district. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 31. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.8029

Issue

Section

Articles