1. Relationships of surveillance, assurance and recognition: early career primary teachers’ engagement with discourses of accountability and performance
- Author
-
Gareth Burns
- Subjects
Semi-structured interview ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Teaching method ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Teacher education ,Literacy ,language.human_language ,Education ,Disadvantaged ,Irish ,050903 gender studies ,Accountability ,Pedagogy ,language ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,0503 education ,Anecdotal evidence ,media_common - Abstract
Anecdotal evidence suggests that Irish primary teachers, and particularly those working in disadvantaged schools, are coming under increasing pressure to orient their practices towards satisfying the exigencies of accountability and performativity (Conway, P. F., and R. Murphy. 2013. “A Rising Tide Meets a Perfect Storm: New Accountabilities in Teaching and Teacher Education in Ireland.” Irish Educational Studies 32 (1): 11–36. doi:10.1080/03323315.2013.773227). Focusing specifically on early career teachers (ECTs) in Irish designated disadvantaged primary schools, this paper investigates ECTs’ engagement with discourses of accountability and performance and its influence on their daily practices. Semi-structured, life-history interviews were conducted with 18 participants drawn from three urban designated disadvantaged schools. Local conditions (level of disadvantage, the intensity and concentration of students’ needs, and school culture), as well as participants’ career stage, impacted upon the way ECTs...
- Published
- 2016
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