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Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education

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Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education. / Smith, Andrew; Swift, Debra.
2011. Paper presented at European Educational Research Conference, Berlin, Germany.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Smith A, Swift D. Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education. 2011. Paper presented at European Educational Research Conference, Berlin, Germany.

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Smith, Andrew ; Swift, Debra. / Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education. Paper presented at European Educational Research Conference, Berlin, Germany.9 p.

Bibtex

@conference{66b9f8c230db4ccb959cdeeac0e41a11,
title = "Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education",
abstract = "{\textquoteleft}The customer selects what they want, we deliver it to them, and they leave happy and grasping the qualification they selected.{\textquoteright} (Member of a management team speaking to academic staff within an FE college in 2010)Biesta (2005) indicated that the rise in the language of learning has impacted across Europe on the way {\textquoteleft}we understand and speak about education{\textquoteright}. It has led to education being seen as a commodity and the learner as a customer, which in turn has led to a market model in FE; one which has influenced policy decisions, funding and created an audit driven culture (James & Biesta 2007, Hodkinson 2008). To ascertain the impact the language of learning has had upon practitioners{\textquoteright} understanding of education, their practice and their professional identity, semi structured interviews were carried out. Twelve practitioners of differing levels of experience in the FE sector across the North of England were interviewed, from PGCE trainees through to teachers with ten or more years of experience. Thematic analysis and coding of responses revealed a fading professional identity that has been replaced in newcomers and those with up to 5 years experience with acceptance of a role as a service provider. Poor knowledge of educational concepts and theories were wide-spread amongst interviewees with a dominance of pseudo-therapeutic ideas along with some evidence of the acquisition view (Sfard 1998) of learning. More worryingly it would appear that a failure to critically question their {\textquoteleft}teacher{\textquoteright}s toolkit{\textquoteright} and an increasingly competitive atmosphere has resulted in blame for poor student performance being externalised onto colleagues and students. This lack of collegiality could hinder attempts to engage practitioners in methods such as Joint Practice Development (Fielding et al 2005) as a means to begin any critical questioning of practice.The language of learning appears to have resulted in a prescriptive professional teacher{\textquoteright}s toolkit being {\textquoteleft}handed{\textquoteright} unquestioningly to trainees as a Balm of Gilead. If as Dewey (1939), Bruner (1996) and others suggest a main aim of education is to bring students {\textquoteleft}into being{\textquoteright}, one could argue that if teachers are being told how to {\textquoteleft}be{\textquoteright} rather than {\textquoteleft}becoming{\textquoteright} themselves it should be no surprise if this aim is not achieved.",
keywords = "Further Education, semantics , LEARNING",
author = "Andrew Smith and Debra Swift",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
note = "European Educational Research Conference ; Conference date: 12-09-2011 Through 16-09-2011",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Where Has All The Education Gone? Exploring the Language of Learning within Further Education

AU - Smith, Andrew

AU - Swift, Debra

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - ‘The customer selects what they want, we deliver it to them, and they leave happy and grasping the qualification they selected.’ (Member of a management team speaking to academic staff within an FE college in 2010)Biesta (2005) indicated that the rise in the language of learning has impacted across Europe on the way ‘we understand and speak about education’. It has led to education being seen as a commodity and the learner as a customer, which in turn has led to a market model in FE; one which has influenced policy decisions, funding and created an audit driven culture (James & Biesta 2007, Hodkinson 2008). To ascertain the impact the language of learning has had upon practitioners’ understanding of education, their practice and their professional identity, semi structured interviews were carried out. Twelve practitioners of differing levels of experience in the FE sector across the North of England were interviewed, from PGCE trainees through to teachers with ten or more years of experience. Thematic analysis and coding of responses revealed a fading professional identity that has been replaced in newcomers and those with up to 5 years experience with acceptance of a role as a service provider. Poor knowledge of educational concepts and theories were wide-spread amongst interviewees with a dominance of pseudo-therapeutic ideas along with some evidence of the acquisition view (Sfard 1998) of learning. More worryingly it would appear that a failure to critically question their ‘teacher’s toolkit’ and an increasingly competitive atmosphere has resulted in blame for poor student performance being externalised onto colleagues and students. This lack of collegiality could hinder attempts to engage practitioners in methods such as Joint Practice Development (Fielding et al 2005) as a means to begin any critical questioning of practice.The language of learning appears to have resulted in a prescriptive professional teacher’s toolkit being ‘handed’ unquestioningly to trainees as a Balm of Gilead. If as Dewey (1939), Bruner (1996) and others suggest a main aim of education is to bring students ‘into being’, one could argue that if teachers are being told how to ‘be’ rather than ‘becoming’ themselves it should be no surprise if this aim is not achieved.

AB - ‘The customer selects what they want, we deliver it to them, and they leave happy and grasping the qualification they selected.’ (Member of a management team speaking to academic staff within an FE college in 2010)Biesta (2005) indicated that the rise in the language of learning has impacted across Europe on the way ‘we understand and speak about education’. It has led to education being seen as a commodity and the learner as a customer, which in turn has led to a market model in FE; one which has influenced policy decisions, funding and created an audit driven culture (James & Biesta 2007, Hodkinson 2008). To ascertain the impact the language of learning has had upon practitioners’ understanding of education, their practice and their professional identity, semi structured interviews were carried out. Twelve practitioners of differing levels of experience in the FE sector across the North of England were interviewed, from PGCE trainees through to teachers with ten or more years of experience. Thematic analysis and coding of responses revealed a fading professional identity that has been replaced in newcomers and those with up to 5 years experience with acceptance of a role as a service provider. Poor knowledge of educational concepts and theories were wide-spread amongst interviewees with a dominance of pseudo-therapeutic ideas along with some evidence of the acquisition view (Sfard 1998) of learning. More worryingly it would appear that a failure to critically question their ‘teacher’s toolkit’ and an increasingly competitive atmosphere has resulted in blame for poor student performance being externalised onto colleagues and students. This lack of collegiality could hinder attempts to engage practitioners in methods such as Joint Practice Development (Fielding et al 2005) as a means to begin any critical questioning of practice.The language of learning appears to have resulted in a prescriptive professional teacher’s toolkit being ‘handed’ unquestioningly to trainees as a Balm of Gilead. If as Dewey (1939), Bruner (1996) and others suggest a main aim of education is to bring students ‘into being’, one could argue that if teachers are being told how to ‘be’ rather than ‘becoming’ themselves it should be no surprise if this aim is not achieved.

KW - Further Education

KW - semantics

KW - LEARNING

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - European Educational Research Conference

Y2 - 12 September 2011 through 16 September 2011

ER -