School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and responsibilities with regard to the education of pupils. This paper draws on an analysis of policy and on qualitative research in the governing bodies of four maintained schools. It explores two policy technologies through which education and the work of school governing bodies are constituted as apolitical. Firstly, it considers the move to recruit governors with (unspecified) ‘skills’, rather than those with a representative role who might provide diverse perspectives. Secondly, it considers the technology of ‘prescribed criticality’, through which ‘effective’ governors are provided with the ‘right’ questions to ask. The paper argues that the operation of these policy technol...
This article focuses on the transformative academies policy in England. Based on an analysis of docu...
Modernising School Governance examines the impact of recent market-based reforms on the role of gove...
School governing bodies in England have considerable formal powers and responsibilities. This qualit...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and responsibilities with regard to the ...
In a recently published article in the Journal of Education Policy, I traced how governors with ‘ski...
This paper reports initial outcomes from a short series of semi-structured interviews in 2017 with s...
The 1988 Education Reform Act radically transformed the local governance of education, according sch...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and responsibilities with regard to the ...
A key driver of market education experimentation in England since the 1980s has been a focus on impr...
Understanding the causes and consequences of the speed and the radical nature of secondary school re...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and duties, and their formal role positi...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and duties and their formal role positio...
School governing bodies in England have considerable formal powers and responsibilities. This qualit...
Wilkins, A. (2016). Modernising school governance: Corporate planning and expert handling in state e...
Abstract: South African public schools’ capacity to govern themselves is an enduring concern of acad...
This article focuses on the transformative academies policy in England. Based on an analysis of docu...
Modernising School Governance examines the impact of recent market-based reforms on the role of gove...
School governing bodies in England have considerable formal powers and responsibilities. This qualit...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and responsibilities with regard to the ...
In a recently published article in the Journal of Education Policy, I traced how governors with ‘ski...
This paper reports initial outcomes from a short series of semi-structured interviews in 2017 with s...
The 1988 Education Reform Act radically transformed the local governance of education, according sch...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and responsibilities with regard to the ...
A key driver of market education experimentation in England since the 1980s has been a focus on impr...
Understanding the causes and consequences of the speed and the radical nature of secondary school re...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and duties, and their formal role positi...
School governing bodies in England have considerable powers and duties and their formal role positio...
School governing bodies in England have considerable formal powers and responsibilities. This qualit...
Wilkins, A. (2016). Modernising school governance: Corporate planning and expert handling in state e...
Abstract: South African public schools’ capacity to govern themselves is an enduring concern of acad...
This article focuses on the transformative academies policy in England. Based on an analysis of docu...
Modernising School Governance examines the impact of recent market-based reforms on the role of gove...
School governing bodies in England have considerable formal powers and responsibilities. This qualit...