Abstract
PurposeThe study analyzes how equity-focused knowledge brokers, working at different levels of the US education system, understand and discuss capacity building in education systems, such as schools, districts, state and local education agencies, to answer this research question: How do equity-focused knowledge brokers support capacity building in education systems?Design/methodology/approachSemi-structured interviews were conducted with five well-known equity-focused organizations that broker evidence-based knowledge and resources to educational systems, practitioners and policymakers. The research team members qualitatively analyzed 18 h of recordings, using their co-developed codebook based on the research questions and prior research on knowledge mobilization.FindingsFour strategies to build capacity within the educational systems were identified. Pursuing sustainable educational change, brokering organizations built capacity with context-specific strategies: (1) engaging various roles within educational systems, (2) fostering communities and partnerships, (3) supporting educators and policymakers’ agency and efficacy and (4) creating a wider culture of external support beyond the systems themselves.Originality/valueThis study shows how knowledge brokers employed context-specific strategies targeting whole systems instead of individuals to ensure that the organization and individuals within had the mindsets, capability, and conditions to engage with and adapt the brokered knowledge and resources. Findings build on existing literature showing how knowledge brokers build capacity through well-known approaches, such as workshops/training, online tutorials and other online resources.
Subject
Communication,Education,Social Psychology
Reference38 articles.
1. Brown, C., Flood, J., MacGregor, S. and Armstrong, P. (2020), “Is distributed leadership an effective approach for mobilising research-informed innovation across professional learning networks? Exploring a case from England”, in Gorard, S. (Ed.), Getting Evidence into Education, Routledge, London, pp. 181-198.
2. Developing a knowledge network for applied education research to mobilise evidence in and for educational practice;Educational Research,2017
3. The role of organizational routines in research use in four large urban school districts (No. 5);National Center for Research in Policy and Practice,2020
4. Knowledge mobilisation in education across Canada: a cross-case analysis of 44 research brokering organisations;Evidence and Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice,2014
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献