23 results
Search Results
2. Virtues, values and the fracturing of civic and moral virtue in citizenship education policy in England.
- Author
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Peterson, Andrew and Civil, David
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP education , *EDUCATION policy , *CURRICULUM , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This paper analyses the fracturing of civic and moral virtue within curricular policies pertaining to Citizenship in England since the late 1990s. A longstanding aim of education and schooling, the teaching of citizenship gained a more secure base in the English curriculum with the introduction of Citizenship as a statutory subject for 11–16 years olds from 2002, which owed a great deal to the Report of the Advisory Group on Education for Citizenship and the Teaching of Democracy in Schools (Crick Report). The report drew intimate connections between civic virtue, moral virtue, and personal character. These connections have become seriously fractured over the years since the Crick Report. In charting this fracturing, the paper will examine how the character-influenced direction taken in the early/mid-2000s was replaced by, at first, a more general emphasis on British Values before morphing into a more specific, though no less problematic, concentration on Fundamental British Values. While character education has gained significant policy attention in England over the last six years, the civic dimensions have been at best underplayed, with little connection to education for citizenship. It is argued that without greater clarity and consistency about how the moral – including moral virtues – intersects with the civic in contemporary Britain, official curricular policy (whether for Citizenship education, character education or more generally) will restrict rather than encourage the education of young citizens who are informed, wise, responsible and active participants in their communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Teachers and lower attaining boys: moving beyond the binary?
- Author
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Collins, Tina and Gazeley, Louise
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER attitudes , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *SECONDARY schools , *CURRICULUM , *GENDER - Abstract
This paper focuses on the learning experiences of lower attaining boys attending Stone Acre, a non-selective state Secondary school in England, and how these were shaped by teachers' gendered beliefs and practices. It argues that despite changes in our theoretical understandings of gender, those found in the context of everyday practice in schools may continue to be rooted in biological understandings of masculinity that tend to reinforce rather than challenge assumptions of deficit. It argues that these interactions form part of a gender regime that also includes the lower-status learning spaces disproportionately occupied by lower attaining boys, with selective grouping practices and the curriculum both contributing to the limiting understandings of boys' educational potential that are ultimately reflected in persistently gendered patterns of attainment. The small number of boys who took part in this study clearly recognised the less favourable positioning of boys as a group. Despite this, they went on to achieve beyond expectations, suggesting that they maintained some agency as learners. Teachers at Stone Acre were also under pressure to ensure achievement against performance threshold levels, suggesting that there may have been some mitigating, trickle down effects. The paper concludes that there is a continuing need for teachers to develop more inclusive understandings of masculinities and of the effects of these on everyday practices in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Curriculum power positioning in classroom music education: music curriculum design in the secondary music classroom in England.
- Author
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Anderson, Anthony
- Subjects
- *
MUSIC classrooms , *CURRICULUM planning , *MUSIC education , *TEACHERS , *EDUCATION policy , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Classroom music teachers in England design their own music curricula for Key Stage 3 (11 − 14 year olds, 6th – 8th Grades). These curricula are designed in a context where policymakers define, regulate and legitimate curriculum formulations. This study traced curriculum development in England, where government has validated a policy driven approach. It explored programs of study, which music teachers in England design as summaries of musical learning for Key Stage 3. The research consisted of documentary analysis in a two-phase study of 13 secondary (high) schools in the English midlands, exploring musical knowledge for musical learning, which is analyzed utilizing qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The paper concludes with a discussion which explores the impacts of music education policy on classroom practices, and presents a proposed model which captures this interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Parental perceptions of an indoor bouldering programme for toddlers and pre-schoolers in England: an initial exploratory study.
- Author
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Gridley, Nicole
- Subjects
- *
PRESCHOOL children , *PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being , *TEACHING methods , *OUTDOOR education , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Many sports programmes designed for children under five claim improvements in physical, social, and psychological outcomes. However, few have been subject to any form of inquiry. This paper reports an initial exploratory study of parental perceptions of an indoor bouldering programme designed for children younger than 6 when delivered in England. Six parents who accessed an average of four sessions took part in a telephone interview to gather initial perceptions, and to establish whether they felt that there had been changes in their children's and their own behaviour by attending the Rock Tots/Kids classes. Thematic analysis indicated that parents were generally positive about the programme, and could identify some changes in their children's intrapersonal, interpersonal, and climbing specific skills when participating in the sessions. Parents also reported changes in their own approaches to parenting. Suggestions for future research of sports programmes targeted at this age group are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The who, how and why of choosing post-16 computing curricula: a case study of English further education colleges.
- Author
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Allison, Jordan
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH language , *EMPLOYEE attitudes , *CURRICULUM , *COMPUTER science - Abstract
Given the evolving and diverse nature of post-16 computing curricula within England, this papers' primary objective was to identify the factors which influence the decision-making processes for education providers when choosing computing curricula. As a main provider of the vast array of post-16 qualifications, and due to their neglect both politically and in research, further education colleges were chosen as the subject of inquiry. Due to the focus on understanding employee perspectives, a qualitative research method was employed where semi-structured interviews were conducted with thirty-two employees from across thirteen colleges within England. These employees included computing lecturers, heads of departments, and members of senior leadership. Findings indicate the extent of the range of post-16 computing qualifications offered by colleges, in addition to identifying who the key players are for computing curricula decisions. Additionally, ten factors were identified as pivotal to influencing curricula choice, and from these factors, a model has been created classifying four central areas that should be considered regarding curriculum choice: labour market information, qualification relevance to industry needs, qualification attractiveness, and current college resources. This model should help inform education providers in making more informed computing curricula decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. The meaning of religious education in English legislation from 1800 to 2020.
- Author
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Fancourt, Nigel
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS education , *ENGLISH language , *CURRICULUM , *FREEDOM of religion , *COMPULSORY education - Abstract
The importance of key legislation in framing religious education in England is widely assumed, and indeed some argue that these Acts – of 1870, 1944 and 1988 – demarcate pedagogical phases, or paradigms. Policy and historical analyses have revealed the political and social disputes around legislation, but often conflate legislation with other policy. This paper reassesses the statutory meanings of 'religious education' through a textual analysis of legislation from 1800 onwards, exploring: the positive entitlement to religious education; the negative freedom not to be subjected to other forms of religious education; curriculum specifications. Sixty-five Acts were reviewed. Presented chronologically, the analysis shows that: the term has a long and varied development that predates compulsory education; several neglected Acts have been pivotal in shaping the subject – notably in 1841, 1869 and 1936; religious education is continuously a marker of religious autonomy for individuals and increasingly for schools, and its curricular use stems from this; the newest related terms are for inspection purposes. The implications are discussed for accounts of the subject, curriculum development and further research, both in England and more widely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Media literacy, curriculum and the rights of the child.
- Author
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Cannon, Michelle, Connolly, Steve, and Parry, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
MEDIA literacy , *CHILDREN'S rights , *NATIONAL curriculum , *MEDIA studies , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Engaging with digital media is part of everyday living for the majority of children, yet opportunities to learn about, through and with media are denied many pupils in compulsory schooling. Whilst Media Studies in the UK is internationally reputed to be well established, changes made to the primary and secondary national curriculum in 2014 included removal of existing media study elements. We demonstrate what is lost by these actions in relation to the United Nations Rights of the Child and, in particular, the right of the child to express identity. We demonstrate how media literacy had previously been included in curriculum, enabling opportunities to address children's rights, and propose that the absence of media education is part of an overall trend of the non-prioritisation of children's rights in England and Northern Ireland. The paper calls for media literacy to be reintroduced into primary and secondary curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The relevance of identity in languages education.
- Author
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Evans, Michael and Fisher, Linda
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE & languages , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Ofsted's 2021 Curriculum Research Review outlines a language pedagogy predicated on an exclusively cognitivist approach to language learning, which relies on three 'pillars of progression': phonics, vocabulary and grammar. The review makes a brief acknowledgement of the importance of motivational factors, including 'pupils' positive views of themselves as language learners' though these factors do not seem to inform its conclusions about what constitutes 'high-quality languages education'. Tellingly, the authors seem to believe that motivational factors are unrelated to learners' perceptions of the relevance of language learning in their lives. Addressing the issue of learners' perception of 'the relevance of languages in their lives' is indeed an important challenge, as the literature indicates, yet it is difficult to see how an exclusively cognitivist approach to language education can do this effectively. In this paper, we point to the growing recognition in languages education research of the key role played by multilingual identity development in successful language learning. We draw also on evidence from our recent AHRC-funded interventional study of Year 9 and Year 10 pupils (ages 13-15) in schools in England to argue for an identity-oriented language pedagogy as an integral component of a transformative approach to language learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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10. The Dance and the Tune: A Storied Exploration of the Teaching of Stories.
- Author
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Smith, Lorna, Thomas, Helena, Chapman, Susan, Foley, Joan, Kelly, Lucy, Kneen, Judith, and Watson, Annabel
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- *
EDUCATION research , *TEACHER educators , *CURRICULUM , *ENGLISH language education , *ENGLISH teachers , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
This paper tells a story of one student teacher's experiences as she considers the choice of fiction texts studied by young secondary learners of English, and how those texts are taught. Based on a series of interviews carried out in the South-West of England and Wales, the narrative provides a perspective on the limitations of current curricula offered by schools that feel bound by a restrictive assessment and inspection regime. It concludes that such curricula can stifle effective teaching and learning, and so teacher educators have a duty to provide new entrants to the profession with a range of perspectives, opportunities and experiences. Through so doing, we promote the fictionalisation of data as a valid, robust approach to educational research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Education recoded: policy mobilities in the international 'learning to code' agenda.
- Author
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Williamson, Ben, Bergviken Rensfeldt, Annika, Player-Koro, Catarina, and Selwyn, Neil
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *COMPUTER programming , *EDUCATIONAL programs , *EDUCATIONAL mobility , *LABOR mobility , *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries - Abstract
Education policy increasingly takes place across borders and sectors, involving a variety of both human and nonhuman actors. This comparative policy paper traces the 'policy mobilities,' 'fast policy' processes and distributed 'policy assemblages' that have led to the introduction of new computer programming practices into schools and curricula in England, Sweden and Australia. Across the three contexts, government advisors and ministers, venture capital firms, think tanks and philanthropic foundations, non-profit organizations and commercial companies alike have promoted computer programming in schools according to a variety of purposes, aspirations, and commitments. This paper maps and traces the evolution of the organizational networks in each country in order to provide a comparative analysis of computing in schools as an exemplar of accelerated, transnationalizing policy mobility. The analysis demonstrates how computing in schools policy has been assembled through considerable effort to create alignments between diverse actors, the production and circulation of material objects, significant cross-border movement of ideas, people and devices, and the creation of strategic partnerships between government centres and commercial vendors. Computing in schools exemplifies how modern education policy and governance is accomplished through sprawling assemblages of actors, events, materials, money and technologies that move across social, governmental and geographical boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Teaching and transitions: understanding classroom practices that support higher education progression in England.
- Author
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Raven, Neil
- Subjects
- *
CLASSROOM management , *CURRICULUM , *HIGHER education , *STUDY skills , *TEACHER-student relationships - Abstract
Teachers are often portrayed as the recipients of information about widening access initiatives and cast in the role of encouraging their students to engage in these activities. However, recent research has corroborated what might constitute an expected association, given the time pupils spend at school: teachers can have a significant impact on the higher education [HE] intentions of young people. Yet, few studies have considered the classroom practices that may account for this. This study seeks to do this by drawing on the insights and experiences of students and teaching professionals based in two schools and a post-16 college. All three institutions have catchments that encompass educationally deprived neighbourhoods. What this investigation reveals is that certain practices can make a significant difference to educational ambitions. Prominent are those that nurture subject interest, link the school curriculum to HE options, and introduce learners to higher-level study skills. In turn, the effectiveness of these practices is influenced by the ability of teaching professionals to build rapport with their students, most prominently by sharing their own learner journeys. The paper concludes by arguing for the wider recognition of these practices since they have the potential to open up HE to more young people from backgrounds that are underrepresented in HE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Taking stock of environmental education policy in England – the what, the where and the why.
- Author
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Glackin, Melissa and King, Heather
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL education , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *EDUCATION policy , *SECONDARY schools - Abstract
Taking England as our case study, this paper reviews secondary school environmental education from a policy perspective. By drawing on Stevenson's typologies for environmental improvement and Lucas' categorisation of environmental education, we analyse national policy documents, local authority and Multi-Academy Trust policies; and individual school planning documents. Our findings suggest in these areas a general absence of environment education policy, and where identified a rhetoric towards conservative reform framed as technology solutions, where learning is about the environment, rather than for the environment. We explain how the (lack of) environmental education rhetoric is a result of global economic changes and national austerity policies, and offer insights and signposting for policy makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Educating career guidance practitioners in the twenty-first century.
- Author
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Gough, John
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of counselors , *CURRICULUM , *EMPIRICISM , *LEARNING , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *SELF-efficacy , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PROFESSIONALISM - Abstract
Rapidly changing policy contexts in England have dramatically affected the provision of career guidance, and the training and development of its practitioners. This paper takes an autoethnographic and self-reflexive approach to exploring the experience of a Senior Lecturer in Career Guidance who manages a centre that offers the Qualification in Career Guidance (QCG), and the Level 6 Diploma in Career Guidance and Development. Key questions are considered, such as: the effects of policy context on the type of qualification and curriculum offered, and their differences; the challenges of engaging learners in theoretical concepts and reflective approaches; and the tensions between ‘training’ practitioners and ‘educating’ them to develop a strong core of professionalism. The paper also considers the extent to which the learners develop as ‘knowledgeable social actors’. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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15. Aspiration, career progression and overseas trained teachers in England.
- Author
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Miller, Paul
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER recruitment , *TEACHERS , *WORKFORCE planning , *CURRICULUM , *CAREER development - Abstract
The recruitment of overseas trained teachers (OTTs) in England is a matter that has received as much attention inside the United Kingdom as outside. Education systems in small island and developing states, especially, were believed to have been placed 'at risk' following the departure of experienced and qualified teachers. Correspondingly, the presence of OTTs in England has contributed to, inter alia, workforce stability, behavioural management solutions and curriculum enhancement. Despite these contributions, however, very little is known about the career progression of OTTs in England. Through a tracer study of OTTs recruited between 2001 and 2008, in the first phase of teacher migration to the UK, this qualitative study explored the perceived factors that facilitate and/or hinder the progression of Caribbean OTTs in England. Drawing on postmodernism, critical and social identity theories, this paper examines how institutional racism and discrimination play a part in restricting the promotion and career progression of OTTs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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16. The meaning of curriculum-related examination standards in Scotland and England: a home–international comparison.
- Author
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Baird, Jo-Anne and Gray, Lena
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *EXAMINATIONS , *LITERATURE , *TEST scoring , *DECENTRALIZATION in government , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *ADULT education - Abstract
The ways in which examination standards are conceptualised and operationalised differently across nations has not been given sufficient attention. The international literature on standard-setting has been dominated by the psychometrics tradition. Broader conceptualisations of examination standards have been discussed in the literature in England, which has curriculum-related examinations at the end of schooling. There has, however, been little analysis of conceptualisations of examination standards in Scotland. Different education systems and examinations operate in Scotland and England, and the stated value positions and processes relating to examination standards differ markedly. This paper critically examines policy positions on assessment standards in Scotland and England through the lens of recent theories of standard-setting. By analysing public statements on standards, the paper illuminates similarities and differences in conceptual bases and operational approaches, and examines the effects of these on outcomes for candidates. We conclude that both systems are operationalising attainment-referencing, but with different processes in Scotland and England and these practices do not fit within previous examination standards classifications. As such, the paper moves examination standards theory forward by concluding that there is at least one superordinate definitional category that draws upon more than one definitional stance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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17. Locating mathematics within post-16 vocational education in England.
- Author
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Dalby, Diane and Noyes, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
VOCATIONAL education research , *SIXTEEN to nineteen education (Great Britain) , *MATHEMATICS education (Secondary) , *CURRICULUM , *STUDENT engagement , *ACADEMIC qualifications , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
The political importance of mathematics in post-16 education is clear. Far less clear is how mathematics does and should relate to vocational education. Successive mathematics curricula (e.g. core skills, key skills) have been developed in England with vocational learners in mind. Meanwhile, general mathematics qualifications remain largely disconnected from vocational learning. Following a brief historical survey of mathematics within vocational education, the paper presents findings from a nested case study of student groups in three large Further Education colleges in England. The primary unit of analysis herein is student groups learning Functional Mathematics in two vocational areas: construction and hairdressing. We show how approaches to organising teaching, developing connected curricula and classroom pedagogy tend toisolateorintegratemathematics from/with the vocational experience.Integratedapproaches are shown to impact positively on student engagement and attitudes to learning mathematics. The paper concludes by discussing the potential impact of academic qualifications displacing vocationally relevant mathematics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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18. Influences on the expression of health within physical education curricula in secondary schools in England and Wales.
- Author
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Harris, Jo and Leggett, Gemma
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICAL education , *CURRICULUM , *PUBLIC health , *PHYSICAL fitness , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper presents selected findings from a wider study on the expression of health within physical education (PE) curricula in secondary schools in England and Wales. The study revealed that the expression of health in PE broadly reflected ideologies associated with promoting ‘fitness for life’ and ‘fitness for performance’ and that representations of both discourses were present, to a lesser or greater extent, in all schools in the study. Curiously, however, rhetorical ‘fitness for life’ discourses were commonly expressed through ‘fitness for performance’ practices in the form of testing and training activities. This paper attempts to explain this mismatch between health-related policy and practice by focusing on what was revealed about the influences on the expression of health in PE. A case study approach was adopted, involving five state secondary schools, three in England and two in Wales. Data sources included health-related school documentation, interviews with PE teachers and observation of a health-related unit of work in one of the schools. The reasons that testing and training activities were the most common contexts for the delivery of health-related learning included the following: conceptual confusion and limited understanding, leading to a belief that training and testing activities are unproblematic and result in increased health, activity and fitness levels; the resolution of pragmatic issues associated with large groups, limited space and minimal equipment as well as preparation for accredited courses in PE; tradition and a desire by teachers to remain with familiar content and teaching approaches, and limited awareness of alternative ‘fitness for life’ pedagogies. This study has served to increase awareness of the influences on and tensions between health-related discourses in secondary school PE curricula in England and Wales and has provided further demonstration of and insight into the complex relationship between health-related policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Targeting of widening participation measures by elite institutions: widening access or simply aiding recruitment?
- Author
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Rainford, Jon
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *ELITISM in education , *CURRICULUM , *HIGHER education , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
The impact of widening participation policy and how it is enacted institutionally is a central concern to Higher Education. It is not simply about the admission of students from disadvantaged backgrounds, but also ensuring that these students complete their courses successfully. This work therefore goes far beyond those departments tasked with access and outreach and has implications for staff across all academic and support service areas. The way in which national policy is interpreted and translated into local policy can therefore affect the whole institution. To bring a spotlight on these issues, this paper will focus on a case study of a single elite institution in England. Focusing primarily on selection of students, it will examine how selection measures can in fact reproduce inequalities. It will therefore demonstrate how this programme may not improve access to Higher Education but instead focuses on ensuring that students already on a path to Higher Education choose this institution in preference to others. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Curriculum policy reform in an era of technical accountability: ‘fixing’ curriculum, teachers and students in English schools.
- Author
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Winter, Christine
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *EDUCATIONAL accountability , *TEACHER participation in curriculum planning , *TEACHER-student relationships , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
Drawing on a Levinasian ethical perspective, the argument driving this paper is that the technical accountability movement currently dominating the educational system in England is less than adequate because it overlooks educators’ responsibility for ethical relations in responding to difference in respect of the other. Curriculum policy makes a significant contribution to the technical accountability culture through complicity in performativity, high-stakes testing and datafication, at the same time as constituting student and teacher subjectivities. I present two different conceptualizations of subjectivity and education, before engaging these in the analysis of data arising from an empirical study which investigated teachers’ and stakeholders’ experiences of curriculum policy reform in ‘disadvantaged’ English schools. The study’s findings demonstrate how a prescribed programme of technical curriculum regulation attempts to ‘fix’ or mend educational problems by ‘fixing’ or prescribing educational solutions. This not only denies ethical professional relations between students, teachers and parents, but also deflects responsibility for educational success from government to teachers and hastens the move from public to private educational provision. Complying with prescribed curriculum policy requirements shifts attention from broad philosophical and ethical questions about educational purpose as well as conferring a violence by assuming control over student and teacher subjectivities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Reflections of the student teacher.
- Author
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Meierdirk, Charlotte
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *CURRICULUM , *GRADUATE students , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STUDENT attitudes , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *JUDGMENT sampling , *MASTERS programs (Higher education) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper explores the concept of reflection and its changing role in the journey of the student teacher. It presents part of the findings of a year-long investigation into the reflective practice of student teachers during their training year. Specifically, it investigates the reflections of the student teachers’ lessons during the PGCE (Post/Professional Graduate Certificate of Education) year at a higher education institution (HEI) in England. The strengths and weaknesses of the student teachers’ lessons are analysed and how these reflections change as they reach Newly Qualified Teachers (NQT) status. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. 'BACK TO OUR ROOTS?' RE-VISITING PSYCHOANALYTICALLY-INFORMED BABY AND YOUNG CHILD OBSERVATION IN THE EDUCATION OF STUDENT SOCIAL WORKERS.
- Author
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Hingley-Jones, Helen, Parkinson, Clare, and Allain, Lucille
- Subjects
- *
CHILD development , *CURRICULUM , *EXPERIENCE , *LEARNING strategies , *PROFESSIONS , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *SOCIAL work education , *SOCIAL workers , *STUDENTS , *JOB performance , *TEACHING methods , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
While there is a well-established literature on psychoanalytically-informed baby and young child observation in social work education, little has been published recently. This paper reviews the rationale for its use, evaluating its impact on students' learning in the light of contemporary policy and practice contexts facing social work education. Analysis of feedback gained from a recent cohort, identifies three ways in which learning through baby and young child observation contributes: firstly, students encounter and learn about the complexity of child development from the direct experience of observing and secondly, observing facilitates the development of important skills for practice; students' 'use of self'. Thirdly, through observing, students describe how they develop the capacity to take-up and sustain a professional role. Well-structured teaching and learning through observation is therefore shown to provide a rigorous, theoretically-grounded contribution to the training of university-based social work students entering this complex and challenging professional field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mapping school types in England.
- Author
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Courtney, Steven J.
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOLS , *NEOLIBERALISM , *EDUCATIONAL standards , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL law & legislation - Abstract
The number and range of school types in England is increasing rapidly in response to a neoliberal policy agenda aiming to expand choice of provision as a mechanism for raising educational standards. In this paper, I seek to undertake a mapping of these school types in order to describe and explain what is happening. I capture this busy terrain from different perspectives: legal status; curricular specialism; pupil selection; types of academy; and school groupings. The mapping highlights the intersections between the current reform agenda and the historical diversity within the English school system to show the dialogue between past and present. Borrowing the geological metaphors of faulting and folding, I argue that long-established school types are not buried under sedimentary layers of reform, but are thrust into the present where they are discursively re-imagined through neoliberalism. Finally, I conceptualise the landscape holistically through the lenses of locus of legitimacy and branding, where I argue that current structural diversification policies enable the enactment of interests other than educational through transferring responsibility for education and related assets away from public and towards corporatised or religious actors and institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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