“Divisive” Education Legislation in the Midwest: A Critical Epistemic Policy Analysis

Gabriel Rodriguez, Sarah Chase, Nicolas Tanchuk, Nancy Gebhart

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This interview-based study examines how justice-oriented K-12 administrators and teachers in Iowa make sense of the recent state-level education policy, H.F. 802. Synthesizing literature on Critical Policy Analysis and epistemic justice, we introduce Critical Epistemic Policy Analysis to understand the micro-level impact of divisive education legislation on efforts to create just and inclusive schools. Findings highlight a sociopolitical terrain with ambivalent and shallow equity commitments, deteriorating support for equity work in schools, and a need to grapple with questions of divisiveness and solidarity in justice-oriented educational activism.
Original languageEnglish (US)
JournalEducational Policy
DOIs
StateE-pub ahead of print - Jul 26 2024

Keywords

  • critical epistemic policy analysis
  • social justice education
  • state policy
  • divisiveness
  • epistemic justice
  • critical policy analysis

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