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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Teaching in the age of accountability: restrained by school culture?
Ilmi WillberghJorunn H. MidtsundstadTurid Skarre Aasebøsubject
060201 languages & linguisticsSemi-structured interviewComparative caseTeaching methodmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050301 education06 humanities and the artsTeacher educationEducationBlame0602 languages and literatureAccountabilityPedagogyMathematics educationPsychology0503 educationMeaning (linguistics)Qualitative researchmedia_commondescription
AbstractIn this paper, we explore how ‘teaching communication’ in the classroom is connected to school culture. In the age of accountability, the outcome focus force to the forefront, a ‘blame game’ which either blames students’ achievements on the teachers and teacher education, or the students and their socio-economic background. We argue that to succeed with teaching and learning is dependent on the school culture more than the single teacher or the students’ backgrounds. School culture is understood as attitudes, communication, student focus and engagement. Teaching communication in this paper is studied as teachers’ and students’ talk about subject matter in whole-class teaching. We explore how different school cultures give students different opportunities to experience meaning from teaching communication. The perspective on meaning is derived from Bildung-centred didactics. By using qualitative comparative case method in Norwegian Lower Secondary schools, we find three different types of ‘teaching ...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-08-26 | Journal of Curriculum Studies |