Teacher Education and the Political

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A01=Anne Phelan
A01=Matthew Clarke
Anne Phelan
anxiety
Author_Anne Phelan
Author_Matthew Clarke
Category=JN
Category=JNF
Category=JNK
Category=JNMT
Chantal Mouffe
Chartered Teacher Initiatives
Common Symbolic Space
Constitutes Teacher Quality
critical pedagogy
critique of teacher training policy
De La Durantaye
De Lissovoy
educational policy analysis
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ESSA
Frag Mentation
Giorgio Agamben
GTCNI
Homo Sacer
intellectual autonomy
Jacques Lacan
Jacques Ranciere
Lacanian Ethics
Matthew Clarke
Ment Governments
NAPLAN
Neo-liberal Education Policies
neoliberalism in education
performance
pluralism in schooling
policy
politics
Professional Alienation
Professional Development
professional standards
Promoting Student Mental Health
Secretary Of State
Teacher Education
Teacher Education Programmes
Teacher Educators
teacher subjectivity
Teacher's Soul
Teacher’s Soul
TWU
UK Government's White Paper
UK Government’s White Paper
UK's Prevent Strategy
UK’s Prevent Strategy
Woods Hole Conference

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138840737
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jan 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Teacher Education and the Political is a striking book which addresses the nature and purpose of teacher education in a global context characterised by economic and political anxieties around declining productivity and social inclusion. These anxieties are manifested in recent policy developments such as the promotion of professional standards, the deregulation and marketisation of teacher education and the imposition of performance-related regimes that tie teachers’ pay to outcomes in high-stakes testing.

The book assesses the implications of such policies for the work of teachers as well as for teacher educators and those undertaking initial teacher training. It is argued that these policy moves can be read as a depoliticising and de-intellectualising of teacher education. In this context, they illustrate how contemporary theory can provide a language for critiquing recent developments and imagining new trajectories for policy and practice in teacher education.

Drawing on the work of theorists from Derrida and Mouffe to Agamben and Lacan, this book argues for the need to maintain a space for intellectual autonomy as a critical dimension of the ethico-political work of teachers. Together these ideas and analyses provide examples of the power of negative thinking, illustrating its capacity to unsettle comfortable truths and foreground the political nature of teacher education.

Current teachers, teacher educators and school leaders will be particularly interested readers, alongside those concerned with policy in the wider educational landscape.

Matthew Clarke is Professor of Education in the School of Education at York St John University, UK.

Anne Phelan is Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy, in the Faculty of Education at The University of British Columbia, Canada.

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