TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimenting With International Curricula in Shanghai
T2 - Policies, Practice, and a Network Ethnography Analysis
AU - Jin, Jin
AU - Chen, Jiaying
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Purpose: Drawing on a study of international schools in Shanghai, this study explores how external experiences and curricula are mobilized as policy tools to inspire local educational innovations and how these experiences are enacted differently by schools. Design/Approach/Methods: Based on a review of policy documents and interviews with school principals, senior management stakeholders, and teachers, this study identifies and compares the typologies of international schools in policy design and practice. Then, by deploying the network ethnography method following three key nodes, this study offers some explanations for the gaps between policy design and enactments. Findings: This study demonstrates the complex relations, interests, and struggles involved in constructing and shaping the meanings of international curricula within local education. The findings show the autonomy of policy networks and the difficulties of ‘steering’ them in a clear-cut way. Originality/Value: This study is one of the earliest attempts, if not the first, to experiment with the method of network ethnography in the context of China. These findings offer a nuanced account of the complex relations and ad hocery involved in policy learning.
AB - Purpose: Drawing on a study of international schools in Shanghai, this study explores how external experiences and curricula are mobilized as policy tools to inspire local educational innovations and how these experiences are enacted differently by schools. Design/Approach/Methods: Based on a review of policy documents and interviews with school principals, senior management stakeholders, and teachers, this study identifies and compares the typologies of international schools in policy design and practice. Then, by deploying the network ethnography method following three key nodes, this study offers some explanations for the gaps between policy design and enactments. Findings: This study demonstrates the complex relations, interests, and struggles involved in constructing and shaping the meanings of international curricula within local education. The findings show the autonomy of policy networks and the difficulties of ‘steering’ them in a clear-cut way. Originality/Value: This study is one of the earliest attempts, if not the first, to experiment with the method of network ethnography in the context of China. These findings offer a nuanced account of the complex relations and ad hocery involved in policy learning.
KW - China
KW - international schools
KW - network ethnography
KW - policy learning
KW - policy mobilities
KW - policy networks
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85170833004
U2 - 10.1177/20965311231201429
DO - 10.1177/20965311231201429
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85170833004
SN - 2096-5311
VL - 6
SP - 623
EP - 645
JO - ECNU Review of Education
JF - ECNU Review of Education
IS - 4
ER -