Abstract
This article defines district central office administrators' roles and capacity to support the implementation of school-community partnerships. Findings come from a strategic case study of central office administrators in Oakland, California (1990-2000). Using concepts from organizational learning theory for the theoretical framework, this study demonstrates that supporting collaboration departs significantly from central office administration-as-usual and highlights conditions and capital that enable central office administrators' new roles.
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Honig, M. I. (2003). Building Policy From Practice: District Central Office Administrators’ Roles and Capacity for Implementing Collaborative Education Policy. Educational Administration Quarterly, 39(3), 292–338. https://doi.org/10.1177/0013161X03253414
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