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Do informal networks become formalised over time? Analysing school networks and multi-academy trust membership in England using ego-centric analysis

Do informal networks become formalised over time? Analysing school networks and multi-academy trust membership in England using ego-centric analysis
Do informal networks become formalised over time? Analysing school networks and multi-academy trust membership in England using ego-centric analysis
Recent decades have seen a global shift in educational policy and practice towards various forms of ‘joining-up’, through partnerships and networks. These networks have differing aims but are broadly geared towards increasing quality and/or innovation in educational provision, although many prove messy and problematic. Policy makers in England have encouraged schools to collaborate, although parallel market pressures can also drive competition, leading to an argument that schools must engage in ‘coopetition’. More recently, policy has encouraged schools to form or join a multi-academy trust (MAT) and the government’s stated aim is that all 21,000 schools in England will be part of a MAT by 2030. A MAT is a formal legal entity with a board and Chief Executive which oversees multiple schools. The headline question we address is whether pre-existing partnerships between schools predict eventual membership of multi-academy trusts? We do this through an analysis of ego network and case study interview data collected from 20 schools across two local areas. We track these networks over a seven-year period, identifying which schools join which MATs. We find that schools do not form or join MATs with other local schools they have collaborated with in the past. We assess this somewhat counter-intuitive finding through the lens of socio-spatial theory, presenting a framework for assessing the interactions between place, scale and networks and considering the implications for policy, practice and research.
ego networks, middle tier, multi academy trusts, networks, place, scale, school partnerships, socio-spatial theory
1389-2843
Greany, Toby
fb73202c-d53c-4f9e-91ba-a214b31c54dc
Cowhitt, Tom
4ad1a19e-6ed4-42d2-8bc6-b2aabb6b3a7a
Downey, Chris
bb95b259-2e31-401b-8edf-78e8d76bfb8c
Greany, Toby
fb73202c-d53c-4f9e-91ba-a214b31c54dc
Cowhitt, Tom
4ad1a19e-6ed4-42d2-8bc6-b2aabb6b3a7a
Downey, Chris
bb95b259-2e31-401b-8edf-78e8d76bfb8c

Greany, Toby, Cowhitt, Tom and Downey, Chris (2023) Do informal networks become formalised over time? Analysing school networks and multi-academy trust membership in England using ego-centric analysis. Journal of Educational Change. (doi:10.1007/s10833-023-09485-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recent decades have seen a global shift in educational policy and practice towards various forms of ‘joining-up’, through partnerships and networks. These networks have differing aims but are broadly geared towards increasing quality and/or innovation in educational provision, although many prove messy and problematic. Policy makers in England have encouraged schools to collaborate, although parallel market pressures can also drive competition, leading to an argument that schools must engage in ‘coopetition’. More recently, policy has encouraged schools to form or join a multi-academy trust (MAT) and the government’s stated aim is that all 21,000 schools in England will be part of a MAT by 2030. A MAT is a formal legal entity with a board and Chief Executive which oversees multiple schools. The headline question we address is whether pre-existing partnerships between schools predict eventual membership of multi-academy trusts? We do this through an analysis of ego network and case study interview data collected from 20 schools across two local areas. We track these networks over a seven-year period, identifying which schools join which MATs. We find that schools do not form or join MATs with other local schools they have collaborated with in the past. We assess this somewhat counter-intuitive finding through the lens of socio-spatial theory, presenting a framework for assessing the interactions between place, scale and networks and considering the implications for policy, practice and research.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 July 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: The funding was provided by Nuffield Foundation (Grant No. EDU/41807, EDU/42157).
Keywords: ego networks, middle tier, multi academy trusts, networks, place, scale, school partnerships, socio-spatial theory

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480666
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480666
ISSN: 1389-2843
PURE UUID: f1dbe062-45d4-4737-b835-7d64e8b373e5
ORCID for Chris Downey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6094-0534

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Date deposited: 08 Aug 2023 16:40
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Toby Greany
Author: Tom Cowhitt
Author: Chris Downey ORCID iD

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