Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England

Education policy makers in England have, over the last thirty years, radically changed schooling. The introduction of a national curriculum, national testing re-gimes, school inspections and school league tables has been at the heart of these changes as they constitute the basis for claims for and c...

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Main Authors: McIntyre, Joanna, Thomson, Pat
Other Authors: Lampert, Jo
Format: Book Section
Published: Springer 2016
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46361/
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author McIntyre, Joanna
Thomson, Pat
author2 Lampert, Jo
author_facet Lampert, Jo
McIntyre, Joanna
Thomson, Pat
author_sort McIntyre, Joanna
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Education policy makers in England have, over the last thirty years, radically changed schooling. The introduction of a national curriculum, national testing re-gimes, school inspections and school league tables has been at the heart of these changes as they constitute the basis for claims for and concerns about school and system improvement. The pre-service education of teachers has also been trans-formed during this period. Once dominated by time spent in higher education, teacher ‘training’ as it is known, now consists of diverse routes, all much more school-based. The latest policy shift to ‘teaching schools’ and the ‘school direct’ route intentionally makes universities even more marginal to teacher preparation. At the same time, policymakers, schools and university faculties of education remain concerned about children from low-income families whose life opportuni-ties are not enhanced by educational success. The thirty year policy settlement of marketization and privatization has produced some overall increase in the mass level of education but has not shifted the tenacious correlation between parental income and levels of formal education and educational attainment. Teacher edu-cators in higher education and in schools have little time or space to address this question directly. In this chapter we present a case study of the teacher education programme which is deliberately designed to address questions of poverty and educational disadvantage – Teach First, a ‘leadership development’ scheme which takes ‘high calibre graduates’ into the most disadvantaged schools in the country.
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spelling nottingham-463612020-05-04T20:05:29Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46361/ Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England McIntyre, Joanna Thomson, Pat Education policy makers in England have, over the last thirty years, radically changed schooling. The introduction of a national curriculum, national testing re-gimes, school inspections and school league tables has been at the heart of these changes as they constitute the basis for claims for and concerns about school and system improvement. The pre-service education of teachers has also been trans-formed during this period. Once dominated by time spent in higher education, teacher ‘training’ as it is known, now consists of diverse routes, all much more school-based. The latest policy shift to ‘teaching schools’ and the ‘school direct’ route intentionally makes universities even more marginal to teacher preparation. At the same time, policymakers, schools and university faculties of education remain concerned about children from low-income families whose life opportuni-ties are not enhanced by educational success. The thirty year policy settlement of marketization and privatization has produced some overall increase in the mass level of education but has not shifted the tenacious correlation between parental income and levels of formal education and educational attainment. Teacher edu-cators in higher education and in schools have little time or space to address this question directly. In this chapter we present a case study of the teacher education programme which is deliberately designed to address questions of poverty and educational disadvantage – Teach First, a ‘leadership development’ scheme which takes ‘high calibre graduates’ into the most disadvantaged schools in the country. Springer Lampert, Jo Burnett, Bruce 2016 Book Section PeerReviewed McIntyre, Joanna and Thomson, Pat (2016) Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England. In: Teacher education in high poverty schools. Education equity economy . Springer, pp. 153-170. ISBN 978-3-319-22058-1 https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-22059-8_9 doi:10.1007/978-3-319-22059-8_9 doi:10.1007/978-3-319-22059-8_9
spellingShingle McIntyre, Joanna
Thomson, Pat
Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title_full Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title_fullStr Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title_full_unstemmed Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title_short Poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from England
title_sort poverty, schooling, and beginning teachers who make a difference: a case study from england
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46361/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46361/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46361/