This paper considers a recent policy initiative in assessment in English primary (5-11 years) schools in which curriculum ‘levels’ used by teachers to judge pupils’ attainment were suddenly removed. Previous work has largely focused on assessment of pupils, but we examine assessment as an activity through which teachers reproduce their professional standing. Using data from a small-scale study we investigate how teachers responded to these changes and what this tells us about the way in which the economy, and politics, of assessment practices operate at school level. Using Foucault as a theoretical framework, we make visible how this system was reorganised by teachers through the construction of new regimes of truth. Implications include ev...
Drawing on the Queensland School Reform Longitudinal Study (QSRLS), this paper documents the assessm...
I started my PhD studies in 2012 with a strong interest in student assessment in higher education. B...
Using the network metaphor, we could call education a hub in which various cultural influences meet ...
This article considers a recent policy initiative in assessment in English primary schools (ages 5-1...
International audienceThis paper explores primary teachers' accounts of their responses to major cha...
Levels formed the basis of primary school assessment since the introduction of the National Curricul...
A recent major policy change in England dismantled the use of National Curriculum levels for assessi...
This paper explores the impact of the 1988 Education Reform Act in England Wales on education ideolo...
This chapter utilises elements of the '5Rs' framework suggested by the book's editors Rudd and Goods...
In the context of increasing political intervention in early years and primary assessment in England...
This thesis examines how four urban primary schools used changes to their assessment practices as a ...
Adopting a sociocultural theoretical framework and based on ethnographic data from two primary schoo...
The global neoliberal context and the emergence of new forms of ‘governance by numbers’ is now recog...
Adopting a socio-cultural theoretical framework and based on ethnographic data from two primary scho...
This paper focuses on qualitative findings from a study that investigated primary teachers’ perspect...
Drawing on the Queensland School Reform Longitudinal Study (QSRLS), this paper documents the assessm...
I started my PhD studies in 2012 with a strong interest in student assessment in higher education. B...
Using the network metaphor, we could call education a hub in which various cultural influences meet ...
This article considers a recent policy initiative in assessment in English primary schools (ages 5-1...
International audienceThis paper explores primary teachers' accounts of their responses to major cha...
Levels formed the basis of primary school assessment since the introduction of the National Curricul...
A recent major policy change in England dismantled the use of National Curriculum levels for assessi...
This paper explores the impact of the 1988 Education Reform Act in England Wales on education ideolo...
This chapter utilises elements of the '5Rs' framework suggested by the book's editors Rudd and Goods...
In the context of increasing political intervention in early years and primary assessment in England...
This thesis examines how four urban primary schools used changes to their assessment practices as a ...
Adopting a sociocultural theoretical framework and based on ethnographic data from two primary schoo...
The global neoliberal context and the emergence of new forms of ‘governance by numbers’ is now recog...
Adopting a socio-cultural theoretical framework and based on ethnographic data from two primary scho...
This paper focuses on qualitative findings from a study that investigated primary teachers’ perspect...
Drawing on the Queensland School Reform Longitudinal Study (QSRLS), this paper documents the assessm...
I started my PhD studies in 2012 with a strong interest in student assessment in higher education. B...
Using the network metaphor, we could call education a hub in which various cultural influences meet ...