29 research outputs found
Rethinking the foundations: towards powerful professional knowledge in teacher education in the USA and England
In this paper, we aim to outline what foundations can offer in terms of understanding education and educational practice, and thus for providing a basis for teachers’ professional knowledge. We look critically at the struggle foundation disciplines often experience with coherence and integration in terms of both their relation to each other and to broader (e.g. philosophical or sociological) thought. We begin to rethink foundations more as a (strong, disciplinary and professionally orientated) region rather than a singular or a set of singulars (to use Bernstein’s terms), although one that is rather different from other regions. In doing so, we suggest that Bernstein’s work, in providing a rich lens to understand curricula and pedagogic practice while holding social and political issues and implications close, is a useful exemplar of the type of educational knowledge which should be at the core of the foundations. A revitalized region of educational foundations can offer the ‘powerful professional knowledge’ that will enable teachers to make knowledgeable professional judgements in educational practice
Educational Studies and Educational Practice: A Necessary Engagement
This paper assesses prospects for the relationship between educational studies and
educational practice, with reference to the current institutional and policy context in England.
Drawing on the sociology of educational knowledge and practice, it is argued that educational
studies can be conceptualised in contrasting ways, by considering internal structures, external
relations and how disciplinary problematics are defined, but also by how educational practice
is portrayed. To develop the analysis, Bernstein’s work on knowledge structures and
academic and professional discourses is articulated with philosophical work that distinguishes
between different conceptualisations of practice prevalent in the humanities and social
sciences. This enables critical reflection on three arrangements of educational studies (the
foundation disciplines, the new science, and the deliberative traditions) each with their own
internal dynamic, socio-epistemic assumptions, relationship to policy, and implications for
the future production of knowledge. This process of reflection is illustrated with reference to
some recent developments in England that illuminate the current position of educational
studies in relation to educational policy and practice
Does the vocational curriculum have a future?
In this paper, which takes the form of a dialogue, we discuss the possible directions that vocational education might take in the contemporary social, economic and technological context of the early 21st century. Taking account of the unresolved debates around vocational education internationally and future global economic demands for expertise we discuss tensions and dichotomies that continue to shape the character of vocational education by questioning definitions of the ‘vocational’ historically and in current policy. These include: the relation between ‘vocational’ and ‘academic’ pathways and the possibility of their integration, the meaning of technical education, the purpose of vocational qualifications, the role of trade unions and employers, and whether there should be a ‘skills route’ for ‘low attainers’. The principal focus is on the English context, although the discussion draws on comparative examples where relevant, as well as broader factors likely to be significant in any country