Abstract
Using the “story constellations” version of narrative inquiry, I tell of two schools—Cochrane Academy and Hardy Academy—that evolved from a shared social narrative history and that were given stories of school and stories of reform that had many features in common. I detail how the founding principals’ narratives informed the teachers’ knowledge and shaped the school contexts in distinctive ways. I illuminate how different confluences of factors gave rise to different metaphors—with different interpretive twists—that the educators subsequently came to live school reform by.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
