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Dr. Katrina Bulkley Receives Grant for Work in Urban Governance

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Dr. Katrina Bulkley, Professor of Educational Leadership, recently received a grant for her work on the project: The New ‘One Best System?’: Urban Governance and Educational Practice in the Portfolio Management Model, along with Douglas Harris of Tulane University and Julie Marsh and Katharine Strunk (both of the University of Southern California).

Dramatic recent changes in many US districts, consistent with the idea of a Portfolio Management Model (PMM), shift from direct district management of schools towards “portfolio managers” including central offices and charter authorizers. Portfolio managers oversee schools operating under varied governance structures, including charter and autonomous schools. Limited research examines this potentially fundamental change in public education governance and the effects of system change on educational practice, an issue of considerable importance. 

This study will examine ties between PMM infrastructure and practices of system-level actors, educational management organizations, schools, and intermediate outcomes linked with student learning. The research focuses on five central mechanisms in the PMM theory of change – autonomy, accountability, school choice, human capital, and capacity-building. The PMM theory of action relies heavily on ideas connected to principal-agent theory, altering governance structures to better align goals between “principals” (organizational leaders) and “agents” (those who answer to principals). Institutional theories supplement principal-agent theory by highlighting the cultural and political forces that shape educational change. The mixed-methods study will utilize these theoretical frameworks to examine three educational systems – Los Angeles, New Orleans, and Denver – from the system to the school levels, using interviews, surveys, case studies, and administrative data.