This paper argues that direct control of the early years literacy curriculum recently exercised by politicians in England has made the boundaries between research, policy and practice increasingly fragile. It describes how policy came to focus most effort on the use of synthetic phonics programmes in the early years. It examines why the Clackmannanshire phonics intervention became the study most frequently cited to justify government policy and suggests a phonics research agenda that could more usefully inform teaching. It argues that, whilst academics cannot control how their research is eventually used by policymakers, learned societies can strengthen their ethics policies to set out clearer ground-rules for academic researchers working a...
This article focuses attention on an underexamined issue in the literature on educational research e...
In recognising literacy as a social practice, some educational research has investigated the nexus b...
The starting point for this paper is the ongoing debate about the relation between research and poli...
Government sponsored educational research is increasingly subject to contractual control over the de...
Teaching children to read is one of the most fundamental goals of early years and primary education ...
This article explores why policy makers in England and Scotland responded so differently to the Clac...
This paper explores the notion of evidence-informed policy making and the factors that have hindered...
The relationship between research and policy and practice in education is a long-standing issue in m...
This article explores why policy makers in England and Scotland responded so differently to the Clac...
This invited paper, authored by members of the National Reading Conference Ethics Innovative Communi...
Socio-cultural and practice-based approaches to literacy, associated with the (New) Literacy Studies...
This publication addresses the question: what sort of research can and should inform such policy? It...
This chapter engages with current public and political debates on the teaching of literacy in the ea...
This paper examines educational research today, its status, and its contribution to the policy-makin...
This article focuses attention on an underexamined issue in the literature on educational research e...
In recognising literacy as a social practice, some educational research has investigated the nexus b...
The starting point for this paper is the ongoing debate about the relation between research and poli...
Government sponsored educational research is increasingly subject to contractual control over the de...
Teaching children to read is one of the most fundamental goals of early years and primary education ...
This article explores why policy makers in England and Scotland responded so differently to the Clac...
This paper explores the notion of evidence-informed policy making and the factors that have hindered...
The relationship between research and policy and practice in education is a long-standing issue in m...
This article explores why policy makers in England and Scotland responded so differently to the Clac...
This invited paper, authored by members of the National Reading Conference Ethics Innovative Communi...
Socio-cultural and practice-based approaches to literacy, associated with the (New) Literacy Studies...
This publication addresses the question: what sort of research can and should inform such policy? It...
This chapter engages with current public and political debates on the teaching of literacy in the ea...
This paper examines educational research today, its status, and its contribution to the policy-makin...
This article focuses attention on an underexamined issue in the literature on educational research e...
In recognising literacy as a social practice, some educational research has investigated the nexus b...
The starting point for this paper is the ongoing debate about the relation between research and poli...