Beyond Decoupling: Rethinking the Relationship Between the Institutional Environment and the Classroom

Author:

Coburn Cynthia E.1

Affiliation:

1. Cynthia E. Coburn, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Administrative and Policy Studies, School of Education, and Research Scientist, Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh. Her research uses organizational sociology to understand the relationship between instructional policy and teachers' classroom practice. The research reported here was awarded the Dissertation Award from Division L (policy and politics) of the American Educational Research Association.

Abstract

The decoupling argument—that schools respond to pressures from the institutional environment by decoupling changes in structures from classroom instruction—has been a central feature of institutional theory since the early 1970s. This study suggests the need to rethink this argument. Drawing on a study of the relationship between changing ideas about reading instruction in California from 1983 to 1999 and teachers' classroom practice, the study provides evidence that messages about instruction in the environment influence classroom practice in a process that is framed by teachers' preexisting beliefs and practices and the nature of the messages themselves. Implications are drawn for theories of teachers' autonomy and methodological approaches to studying macro-micro linkages.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Education

Reference95 articles.

1. Askew Billie J., Fountas Irene C., Lyons Carol A., Pinnell Gay Su, Schmitt. Maribeth C. 1998. Reading Recovery Review: Understandings, Outcomes, and Implications. Columbus, OH: Reading Recovery Council of North America.

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