Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1 The emptiness of English public policy
- 2 Where it all begins: the tasks for Education and others
- 3 Governance change in England
- 4 Middle tier functioning, standards, places and school ecosystems
- 5 But society won’t wait: the communities around the school and the role of local government
- 6 More muddle: English Education’s unstable assemblage
- 7 Wider parallels: limitations at the top
- 8 The construction of central governments that find it all too difficult
- 9 Re-democratising and re-politicising
- 10 Conclusion: Beginning to return English schooling to the public service
- Appendix
- Notes
- References
- Index
Appendix
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1 The emptiness of English public policy
- 2 Where it all begins: the tasks for Education and others
- 3 Governance change in England
- 4 Middle tier functioning, standards, places and school ecosystems
- 5 But society won’t wait: the communities around the school and the role of local government
- 6 More muddle: English Education’s unstable assemblage
- 7 Wider parallels: limitations at the top
- 8 The construction of central governments that find it all too difficult
- 9 Re-democratising and re-politicising
- 10 Conclusion: Beginning to return English schooling to the public service
- Appendix
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
In many ways, the subject matter of this book is a lifelong project and interest, to which I hope I have brought the previous research authority of two of my three previous books and a variety of published articles referred to in the text.
The most recent phase of my research started in 2017, and it included the work on the two councils described in the book. This entailed live semi-structured interviews with senior politicians of all three main political parties, their senior officers – chiefs and heads of school improvement – and visits to schools and MATs based in their areas. These involved further semistructured interviews with CEOs, or their deputies, and headteachers. More latterly these had to be done by video call, with the last one being in 2021. In addition, I continued with my interviews of ex-senior officials, as I have been doing for some time, now all in different roles. They had been involved in central government as the policies and their effects described here were in the process of being developed and ‘rolled out’. I also continued to visit other MAT CEOs not located in either of the two local authorities (LAs).
My access was successful – with no refusals this time – as I drew on my large national network, begun long ago as a senior LA officer myself, to make introductions. As said in my acknowledgements, this also involved not seeking quotations beyond the odd unattributable phrase or two used in the text. Further, in an apparently less open governance environment than might be expected in the 21st century, I was able to obtain documentation that never saw the light of day in public-facing contexts, such as on council or other websites. Their deeper analysis helped provide excellent context for the interviews and the non-public thinking that was taking place.
As Dan Gibton (2016) says, this means that I was and was seen as an ‘insider’, with knowledge of my interviewees’ work and strategic environment and experience of taking the sorts of decisions with which they were faced every day. This can also be problematic, of course, as empathy with such senior public figures can obscure other contexts of their work and their significance. This could include disagreement, for example, and sometimes hostility, wherever triangulation takes one.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Schooling in a DemocracyReturning Education to the Public Service, pp. 131 - 132Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023