This article is informed by a longitudinal research project undertaken with 22 teachers, four head teachers and two other related education professionals in England between May 2010 and April 2011. Drawing on 50 semi-structured interviews and some related email correspondence, the project investigates this cohort’s view of teachers’ professional autonomy. It takes as its starting point the hegemony of neo-liberal policy and the adoption and reinforcement of this by UK political parties of all persuasions. The outcomes of the project demonstrate that notwithstanding the thrust of such policy – manifested most obviously by the current conversion of increasing numbers of schools to semi-privatised academy status – teachers acknowledge, explici...
This article considers the experiences of two teacher educators working with undergraduate and postg...
This thesis is concerned with teacher agency and how this is achieved within the autonomous schoolin...
In this paper, we explore Lawrence Stenhouse’s provocation that too much research has been conducted...
The current coalition government in England has expressed its commitment to establishing an autonomo...
This article argues that contradictory forces affect teachers' work in the neo-liberal school system...
Three decades of neo-liberal education in western countries, particularly English-speaking countries...
Neoliberal agendas have acted to limit the agency of groups and of individuals through both the impo...
Teacher professionalism is a concept with a contentious history. In the midst of wider research deba...
This paper focuses on the Conservative-Liberal coalition government's policy in teacher education in...
This article examines how upper secondary school teachers perceive and respond to the consequences f...
Globalisation and neoliberal political agendas currently dominate educational policies and practices...
The first part of this article contextualises ‘education reform’ – the restructuring of education an...
Over the last 30 years, teacher education has become a major area of government policy in many count...
This article reports a 3-year case study of a primary school in England, in which a recently appoint...
The first part of this article contextualises 'education reform' - the restructuring of education an...
This article considers the experiences of two teacher educators working with undergraduate and postg...
This thesis is concerned with teacher agency and how this is achieved within the autonomous schoolin...
In this paper, we explore Lawrence Stenhouse’s provocation that too much research has been conducted...
The current coalition government in England has expressed its commitment to establishing an autonomo...
This article argues that contradictory forces affect teachers' work in the neo-liberal school system...
Three decades of neo-liberal education in western countries, particularly English-speaking countries...
Neoliberal agendas have acted to limit the agency of groups and of individuals through both the impo...
Teacher professionalism is a concept with a contentious history. In the midst of wider research deba...
This paper focuses on the Conservative-Liberal coalition government's policy in teacher education in...
This article examines how upper secondary school teachers perceive and respond to the consequences f...
Globalisation and neoliberal political agendas currently dominate educational policies and practices...
The first part of this article contextualises ‘education reform’ – the restructuring of education an...
Over the last 30 years, teacher education has become a major area of government policy in many count...
This article reports a 3-year case study of a primary school in England, in which a recently appoint...
The first part of this article contextualises 'education reform' - the restructuring of education an...
This article considers the experiences of two teacher educators working with undergraduate and postg...
This thesis is concerned with teacher agency and how this is achieved within the autonomous schoolin...
In this paper, we explore Lawrence Stenhouse’s provocation that too much research has been conducted...