Exploring The Impact Of Educational Branding, Social Media And Public Relations On Rural Education: A Critical Analysis
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UniMAC
Abstract
Although strategic communication has gained prominence within the education sector, the use of
branding, public relations, and social media in rural pre-tertiary institutions remains significantly
underexplored. This study examines the forms, perceptions, and effects of these communication
practices within the Ekumfi District of Ghana. Guided by Resource Dependence Theory, the
research investigates how schools operating under severe resource constraints employ
communication as a tool for institutional survival and community engagement.
Anchored in an interpretivist paradigm, the study adopted a qualitative multiple case study
approach involving three purposively selected public pre-tertiary schools. Data were collected
through in-depth semi-structured interviews with school administrators and teachers,
complemented by focus group discussions with parents and students, yielding a total of 28
participants. The data were analyzed using Thematic Analysis, using Braun and Clarke’s six-phase
analytical framework, which facilitated the identification of recurring patterns in communication
behavior and resource negotiation.
The findings reveal that rural educational branding is not driven by visual imagery or promotional
materials but by “Performance Signaling,” where academic achievement and student discipline
function as the core indicators of institutional value. Public relations emerges as “Headteacher
Diplomacy,” characterized by the school leader’s active participation in community social
activities to build trust and legitimacy rather than through formal communication structures. The
study further identifies a deliberate “Strategic Avoidance” of social media, shaped both by
infrastructural limitations and by concerns about maintaining institutional credibility. Overall, the
study concludes that communication in rural schools is fundamentally a survival strategy essential
for attracting resources. The study recommends that policymakers design educational
interventions that recognize and support these context-specific communication practices.
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