Policy Document Analysis: A Practical Educational Leadership Tool and A Qualitative Research Method
Policy Document Analysis: A Practical Educational Leadership Tool and A Qualitative Research Method
Policy Document Analysis: A Practical Educational Leadership Tool and A Qualitative Research Method
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Policy Document Analysis
complex because there are multiple stakeholders and many leaders. As Alexan-
der (2013) states:
The complexities of leadership are particularly apparent in education policy,
where leadership takes several forms, from the teacher in the classroom to the
principal of a building, to the administrators of a school district, to the school
board members […], to the policymakers at the state level or their peers in the
federal government. (p. 2)
The area of policy is also of great consequence for educational leaders as
it creates the platform for all leadership and management activity which occurs
around policy implementation. Everyone in a school is impacted by policy gui-
delines whether these are externally or internally determined. Leaders need to
be aware of the demands created by external policy as they mediate between the
external and the internal policy contexts (Busher, 2006). Internal policy deve-
lopment is the preserve of governance: a school Board of Trustees, in the case of
New Zealand, who are the internal policy makers whilst educational leaders are
the managers of policy implementation (Kilmister, 1993). Busher (2006) writing
from a United Kingdom perspective ascribes internal policy making to school le-
adership teams and suggests that it is middle level leaders in schools who are the
chief policy implementers. It is policy documentation that provides guidelines for
practice and consequently policy documents need to be understood at a depth
that enables capable action to ensue. Thus, educational leaders need skills that
span the interpretation of purposes and recognition of the values that drive the
policy; a critical appreciation of the construction and elements of the policy; and
competent implementation, monitoring and review (evaluation) of the policy in
practice. In short, educational leaders must engage with policy in a variety of
ways and could make pragmatic use of the sort of guided policy document analy-
sis framework that is presented in this paper.
Research that focuses on educational problems can make use of policy do-
cuments to understand the nature and sources of problems that are complex.
As a research tool, policy document analysis is a method for investigating the
nature of a policy document in order to look at both what lies behind it and
within it. It particularly lends itself to being employed as a method in qualitative
research projects. The kind of documentary analysis presented in this paper is
centred on policy documents, therefore, the method requires some understan-
ding of the nature and purpose of policy. The context for exploring the method
has been limited in this paper to the arena of education policy in New Zealand
that ranges across several levels. At the highest level is legislation that guides
education provision nationally in the form of acts of Parliament. In the case of
New Zealand this is the Education Act (2017). At the next level is national policy
that applies widely and is often intended to generate organisational policy that
guides implementation actions. At both the upper level of the administration of
education (policy making, policy development) and the lower institutional le-
adership level (policy management, policy implementation) knowledge of the
purpose and function of policy documentation is essential in the process of scru-
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Carol Cardno
tinising and analysing policy documents. The rest of this paper is structured to
introduce the nature of policy documents with particular reference to levels of
policy documentation in the context of performance appraisal in New Zealand
schools. The advantages and disadvantages of the documentary analysis method
are discussed, followed by presentation of a framework for conducting analysis of
an organisational policy document. An approach to content analysis is outlined
to provide a practical resource for analytic activity that could be appropriate in
either research or practice in educational leadership settings.
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Another disadvantage with some kinds of documents is that they may be diffi-
cult to locate and access for geographical reasons. Because documents are not
produced specifically for research purposes, they may contain insufficient detail
to be of use – especially when the research project is relying exclusively on docu-
mentary sources of data. A case in point is the collection of a set of organisational
policies from a variety of institutions that are available on the internet. Whilst
this provides ease of access, it is not easy to authenticate the currency of these
documents. Hence, as well as obtaining the policy documentation from a website
or downloading it in print form it may be necessary to contact the organisation to
check that these are indeed the most up-to-date versions of the document. There
is also the question of how accurate the document may be. Its authenticity may
be questionable. Merriam (1998, p. 125) cautions there are cases when “public
records that purport to be objective and accurate contain built-in biases that a
researcher may not be aware of”.
A concern that a collection of documents may not be complete could attend
the selection of documents for a particular study. The researcher can overcome
a limitation known as “biased selectivity” (Yin, 1994, p. 80) that is related to
incomplete sets of documentation by becoming aware of both what is available
and what is not available and why. In the case of organisational policy documents
it is important to remember that policy at the institutional level is often genera-
ted by external or state mandates and that the antecedent policies (those that
give rise to a need for institutional policy) may themselves need to be accessed.
Furthermore, policies generate a spate of documents related to their implemen-
tation in organisations. These subsidiary documents in the shape of procedures,
regulations and reports of a variety of activities also constitute the essential po-
licy documents that need to be assembled to create a complete collection for
analysis. Leaders in educational organisations need to be aware of the extent of
documentation that radiate from policy in the form of procedures and guidelines
for implementation – all of which must be included in effective reviews of policy.
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Carol Cardno
Policy documents are produced in the arena of politics and policy (Lingard
& Ozga, 2007) that constitute a major intellectual field in the form of Policy Stu-
dies which is a multi-disciplinary academic field associated with such disciplines
as economics, sociology, history, political studies and education. The study of
policy in this wide sense incorporates policy theory, policy process, policy analysis
and policy evaluation. Public policy (produced by governments) and organisati-
onal policy (produced to guide the professional, commercial and industrial sec-
tors) contribute a vast collection of documentary material or ‘policy text’ which
is the focus of policy studies. At a macro level, large-scale policy document (or
text) analysis must be distinguished from the micro exercise of analysing policy
documents in use at the organisational level as a method for research or leaders-
hip understanding of policy – which is the focus of this paper. In policy research
a well-known conceptual framework for policy analysis was proposed by Taylor,
Rizvi, Lingard, and Henry (1997) and has been built upon subsequently by se-
veral other policy theorists (see for example, Bell & Stevenson, 2006; Busher,
2006). It involves a study of policy from three aspects: context, text and consequ-
ences which are elaborated below.
Policy context is about the forces and values that have driven a policy to come
into being. This relates to the socio-political environment and requires unders-
tanding of the antecedents of the policy; the issues and pressures that gave rise
to a need for the policy in the first place. What is being considered is the genesis
and history so that the policy background can be established. For example, one
should search for information on how the government policies in a particular
area relate to previous policies and powerful people (Bell & Stevenson, 2006;
Busher, 2006)
Policy text is the content of the policy document and the core focus of analy-
tical activity. It is this text that needs to be subjected to detailed data analysis,
especially in qualitative research where the issue is not the mere counting of
words but the questioning of the text as one searches for answers. As Bell and
Stevenson (2006) assert, we need to interrogate the text to find out why it is
structured or framed in a particular way. Questions about the purposes and the
values that underpin the policy should be posed. We need to look behind and
beyond the words to draw inferences that may link to theories about the policy
arena and consider both what is said and what is not. We also need to consider
how the policy could be interpreted from a variety of standpoints. It is this kind
of deep, detailed, textual analysis that is the work of the qualitative researcher
(Silverman, 2006).
Policy consequences are related to the way in which a policy is implemented.
Policy implementation practice is also affected by the way the users of the policy
interpret it (Ryan, 1994). We need to consider the effectiveness of procedures
documented to give consistent guidance in how the policy is implemented (Ng,
2016). We should also be looking for signs of likely challenges to implementing
the policy which could be related for example to people, processes, or structure
(Alexander, 2013). Invariably this aspect of the analysis is akin to evaluation
of the policy in practice and is often referred to the literature as policy review
(Kilmister, 1993).
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Carol Cardno
Table 1
Levels of Organisational Policy Documents – An Example of Performance Appraisal
Policy in New Zealand Schools.
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Policy Document Analysis
The tool in Table 2 is structured around five aspects which are highlighted as
important in several policy analysis texts (Alexander, 2013; Bell & Stephenson,
2006; Busher, 2006). The aspects that need to questioned are: (1) document pro-
duction and location; (2) authorship and audience; (3) policy context; (4) policy
text; and (5) policy consequences. To address each aspect a range of questions
are proposed to assist critical probing. The answers to questions should lie within
the policy text itself, or could be noted as omissions from the policy. Because
policy is not value-free identifying the values (both implicit and explicit) in the
policy and tensions between values) allows the analysis to probe the policy to
uncover forces or drivers that influenced inception and impact expectations.
This type of analysis is based on a prior understanding of the policy environ-
ment. Consequently, an expectation of policy document analysis is that the edu-
cational leader or researcher has familiarity with not only the policy document
but also a literature base that provides knowledge about the policy arena under
study. A review of the relevant literature is normally undertaken prior to docu-
ment assembly and analysis. This provides a theoretical platform for devising
the specific questions that will be formulated to guide the scrutiny of text in the
document. Whilst acknowledging that few educational leaders (unless they are
students in a policy analysis course) would have the resources or interest to go to
this depth, it is nevertheless important that they are made aware of the backgro-
und provided by a pertinent theory-base.
Table 2
Questions for Organisational Policy Analysis
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Carol Cardno
The tool in Table 3 guides content analysis of the document with a focus on
purpose of the policy, how the policy was constructed and issues related to its
implementation and subsequent impact. This tool is also designed to be used eit-
her by educational leaders or by researchers. Educational leaders should adopt a
collaborative approach with appropriate stakeholders focusing on a single policy
document that requires review. For the researcher, the approach would be to
select several policies for systematic analysis using this exercise.
Table 3
Policy Content Analysis Exercise
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Policy Document Analysis
has a long tradition of use in relation to conversational analysis and print analysis
where the systematic and objective application of rules yields robust results in
terms of what is evident in the text. Frequency analysis is the cornerstone of
quantitative content analysis and provides a rigid procedure for making content-
descriptive judgements.
From a qualitative perspective and particularly in relation to the analysis of
content in organisational policy documents this ‘word count’ or statistical app-
roach is not appropriate other than as a broad brush overview of the document
to isolate the frequency with which some terms are used. Content analysis can
be employed in a less rigid, more flexible manner in qualitative studies when
researchers draw inferences from the content by acknowledging the mere pre-
sence or absence of certain words or phrases. George (2009, p. 145) expresses
this notion as follows:
We employ the term “non-frequency” to describe the type of non-quantitative,
non-statistical content analysis, which uses the presence or absence of a cer-
tain content characteristic or syndrome as a content indicator in an inferenti-
al hypothesis. In contrast, a “frequency” content indicator is one in which the
number of times one or more content characteristics occur is regarded as rele-
vant for the purpose of inference.
When frequency-counting is no longer the main task of the analyst it allows
for a more holistic study of content and as Kohlbacher (2006, p. 16) asserts, “con-
text is also central to the interpretation and analysis of the material. In fact, it is
not only the manifest content of the material that is important but also the latent
content”. From a qualitative perspective, there is a need to consider what may
lie in, beneath and around the text in terms of themes that might be conveyed by
or inferred from the words themselves. Context is particularly important in the
analysis of policy documents and is consistent with what this method draws on
in terms of utilising policy studies resources (see for example, Bell & Stevenson,
2006). It should be noted that in the use of qualitative documentary analysis the-
re is almost always a study of the theory base in the form of pertinent literature.
This review of theory and research can be drawn upon by the analyst to probe not
only the text but its meaning (Scott, 1990; Silverman, 2006).
It is important to analyse the content of organisational policy documents to
establish not only what is said but also what is not said. A content analyst should
be able to distinguish clearly between what is content description and what is
being inferred from the content. In this sense it is an approach that is extremely
well aligned with the broad directions for policy analysis in general which confirm
the importance of the three facets of context, text and consequences. In relation
to each facet of the content analysis the following questions should be posed. The
task of the analyst is to answer these questions with reference to a) the actual text
in the policy and b) the critical issues that are raised in the literature surrounding
the policy.
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Carol Cardno
more critical level than that expected of content analysis which begins and often
ends with the manifest text.
As Bryman (2012) reminds us, there is no single or agreed version of disco-
urse analysis. It is an approach that can be applied to oral and written language,
however as a term that relates to the analysis of document texts, it is less recog-
nised than content analysis. An exception is the employment of documentary
discourse analysis in a study undertaken by Perryman (2012) who used this met-
hod in her study of a collection of school documents related to external quality
inspection by Ofsted (the Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services
and Skills in the United Kingdom). What she describes as the activity of docu-
ment discourse analysis bears considerable resemblance to what Bowen (2009)
describes as the scrutiny of document content to identify categories and themes.
I was particularly interested in how the school documentation mirrored the
language of Ofsted. In order to identify the actual words and phrases I regarded
as the language of Ofsted, I examined in detail the framework for inspection,
compared this with the school’s inspection reports and literally highlighted and
counted recurring words. I then created a list that I could look out for in the
school’s documentation such as ‘standards’, ‘policy’, ‘quality’, ‘teaching and le-
arning’. Beyond this mechanistic process, I was also interested in looking for
tone and mood. (p. 315)
In this study, the discourse analysis extended beyond documents to primary
sources of data such as transcripts from interviews and questionnaire respon-
ses. Nevertheless, the reference to discourse analysis in this study is noteworthy.
Discourse analysis is described as an approach to the analysis of language in-
volving looking into the text for patterns or themes and also considering the so-
cio-cultural contexts that give rise to the text itself. In other words, it expects
the researcher to focus on what lies beyond the language itself and to consider
the relationship between the social world and the way in which language is used
(Bryman, 2012; Paltridge, 2006). This notion of looking beyond the actual words,
phrases, or sentences that constitute communication can be an attractive one to
transfer to a study of the language of official documents, and particularly to an
analysis of the context aspect of institutional policy documents and inferences
that apply to implementation issues. In both of these arenas the analysis deepens
beyond what is manifest in text to embrace the latent messages (Duriau, Reger,
& Pfarrer, 2007).
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Policy Document Analysis
For educational leaders it is critical to develop and hone the skills of practi-
cal policy analysis as this is an expectation of leadership capability. Organisation
level policy requires development, monitoring, review and constant interpretati-
on into practice. If leaders are knowledgeable about the basics of policy analysis
and know how to scrutinise and evaluate a policy document, then they can lead
other key stakeholders in collaborative approaches to this work.
Embarking on a document analysis exercise without having established a
conceptual or structural framework for the analysis is likely to lead to confusion
and an unconvincing report of the analysis. A framework allows selected aspects
of the policy to be evaluated based on the particular arena in which the policy
operates. For example, in this article where performance appraisal policy in an
educational setting is referred to, the conceptual framework suggested integrates
elements that help us judge the quality of the documentation in relation to three
fundamental elements of policy analysis: context, text and consequences (Taylor
et al., 1997; Lindard & Ozga, 2007). In each case the essential initial task is to
connect with the relevant literature to determine an appropriate framework for
analysis. The tools for analysis include guidance about judging policy quality and
approaching the analysis in a structured way and these are highly recommended
for use by educational leaders in the process of policy development and review
activities.
An understanding of the method of policy document analysis could be both
insightful and useful for the people who make and use policy because policy ne-
eds to be regularly reviewed and updated to meet the current needs of an or-
ganisation. Hence, it is suggested that policy document analysis can be put to
practical use by educational leaders and those with educational administration
responsibility to develop and review policy. The method is also attractive to stu-
dents and first-time researchers wishing to employ a second research method to
establish background evidence or contextualise a study especially when related
to a specific genre of documentation. In summary, policy document analysis is
purported as having valuable practical application in a formal research setting,
and as a tool that can be used by educational leaders with raised awareness of po-
licy complexity and policy implementation challenges which could consequently
improve the quality and outcomes of policy at the organisational level.
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Carol Cardno
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