151 research outputs found
Beyond compliance: teacher education practice in a performative framework
publication-status: Publishe
How policy impacts on practice and how practice does not impact on policy
Our project attempts to understand how the Learning and Skills Sector functions. It traces how education and training policy percolates down through many levels in the English system and how these levels interact, or fail to interact. Our first focus is upon how policy impacts upon the interests of three groups of learners: unemployed people in adult and community learning centres, adult employees in work-based learning and younger learners on Level 1 and Level 2 courses in further education. Our next focus is upon how professionals in these three settings struggle to cope with two sets of pressures upon them: those exerted by government and a broader set of professional, institutional and local factors. We describe in particular how managers and tutors mediate national policy and translate it (and sometimes mistranslate it) into local plans and practices. Finally we criticise the new government model of public service reform for failing to harness the knowledge, good will and energy of staff working in the sector, and for ignoring what constitutes the main finding of our research: the central importance of the relationship between tutor and students
Exploratory investigation of drivers of attainment in ethnic minority adult learners
There is evidence that ethnic minority learners in further education in England either under-achieve or are under-represented because they face various inhibitors connected to their ethnicity. Motivators may be in place, however, which increase attainment specifically for some ethnic groups. This exploratory study intends to examine what works and what does not among South Asian (Pakistani and Bangladeshi heritage) females and black male adult learners in FE. A mixed-method study was carried out using questionnaires and focus groups with 68 ethnic minority students in three further education colleges in England. The combination of the results showed that being a member of a minority culture and/or religion may increase feelings of isolation in academic settings; teaching staff who are knowledgeable about the student’s culture increase feelings of inclusion; and role models are crucially important. Results are discussed in light of British data of school experiences of ethnic minority learners
Family learning and the socio-spatial practice of 'supportive' power
Family learning has been an important mode of education deployed by governments in the United Kingdom over the past 20 years, and is positioned at the nexus of various social policy areas whose focus stretch beyond education. Drawing on qualitative research exploring mothers' participation in seven different family learning programmes across West London, this paper looks at how this type of education is mobilised; that is, how mothers are 'encouraged' to participate and benefit from this type of programme. Framed by a neo-liberal policy climate and Foucauldian writings on governmentality and surveillance, we explore how participating mothers are carefully 'targeted' for this type of learning through their children and through school/ nursery spaces, and how programmes themselves then operate as a supportive social space aimed at facilitating social networks, friendship and personal development linked to positions of gender, ethnicity, class and migrant status. It is the socio-spatial workings of 'supportive' power and power relations that enable family learning to be mobilised that ensures its popularity as a social policy initiative.The British Academy (small research grant SG42092)
A ‘home-international’ comparative analysis of widening participation in UK higher education
Since devolution of education policy to the four ‘home’ nations of the UK, distinct approaches to addressing social inequalities in higher education participation have developed across the four jurisdictions (England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland). From a critical examination of 12 policy documents, this paper presents a comparative policy analysis of the qualitatively distinct ways that inequalities in higher education are conceptualised across the ‘home’ nations. Basil Bernstein’s theoretical ideas are drawn on to help unearth distinctions in their beliefs about the underlying nature of educational inequalities. These can be understood in relation to their degree of closeness to either neoliberal or social democratic ideological positions, and we show that the ‘home’ nations of the UK place differing emphases on what form of higher education they aim to widen access to, and how they intend to achieve thi
The state of professional practice and policy in the English further education system: a view from below
This paper addresses a recurring theme regarding the UK’s Vocational Education and Training (VET) policy in which Further Education (FE) and training are primarily driven by employer demand. It explores the tensions associated with this process on the everyday working practices of FE practitioners and institutions and its impact on FE’s contribution to the wider processes of social and economic inclusion. At a time when Ofsted and employer-led organisations have cast doubt on the contribution of FE, we explore pedagogies of practice that are often unacknowledged by the current audit demands of officialdom. We argue that such practice provides a more enlightened view of the sector and the challenges it faces in addressing wider issues of social justice, employability and civic regeneration. At the same time, the irony of introducing laissez-faire initiatives designed to remove statutory qualifications for FE teachers ignores the progress made over the past decade in raising the professional profile and status of teachers and trainers in the sector. In addressing such issues, the paper explores the limits and possibilities of constructing professional and vocational knowledge from networks and communities of practice, schools, universities, business, employers and local authorities, in which FE already operates
From Plastic Forks to Policy Change: Involving Disabled Learners in the Work of the National Learner Panel
http://www.niace.org.uk/sites/default/files/project-docs/Plastic-forks-main-report-[PDF].pd
Successful participation for all Widening adult participation
Includes bibliographical references. Title from coverSIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:m03/37115 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Strategic area reviews Consultation on guidance to support Local Learning and Skills Councils (local LSCs) and their partners in undertaking strategic area reviews of provision starting in 2003
Title from cover. Also available via the InternetAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:3237. 250(02/21) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
Funding Development of a common funding approach for additional learning support
Title from cover. Also available via the InternetAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:3237. 250(03/03) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
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