Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education

The commitment to establishing a 'school-led' system of teacher education in England, announced by the Coalition Government in 2011 (DFE, 2011) and relentlessly pursued thereafter, represented a radical departure from previous kinds of initial teacher education partnership. While it is...

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Main Authors: Mutton, T, Burn, K, Menter, I
Format: Journal article
Published: Routledge 2016
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author Mutton, T
Burn, K
Menter, I
author_facet Mutton, T
Burn, K
Menter, I
author_sort Mutton, T
collection OXFORD
description The commitment to establishing a 'school-led' system of teacher education in England, announced by the Coalition Government in 2011 (DFE, 2011) and relentlessly pursued thereafter, represented a radical departure from previous kinds of initial teacher education partnership. While it is entirely consistent with a neo-liberal agenda, with its strong regulatory framework and appeal to market mechanisms, it is also underpinned by a particular conception of teaching as a craft - 'best learnt as an apprentice observing a master craftsman or woman' (Gove, 2010). In 2014 the Government established a Review of Initial Teacher Training, led by a primary school headteacher, Sir Andrew Carter. This signalled the recognition of teacher education as a 'policy problem', adopting Cochran-Smith's term. The ensuing report, published in early 2015, was more nuanced than might have been anticipated although a number of profound tensions emerge from a closer analytical reading; four of these tensions are similar to those previously defined by Cochran-Smith and two are newly emergent. This paper identifies and discusses these tensions as they appear in the Carter Review and relates them to wider debates about the links between teaching, teacher education, evidence and research and to policy making processes in education.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0781caa3-d60e-41bb-b84a-a54976a1603f2022-03-26T09:07:50ZDeconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher educationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0781caa3-d60e-41bb-b84a-a54976a1603fSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2016Mutton, TBurn, KMenter, IThe commitment to establishing a 'school-led' system of teacher education in England, announced by the Coalition Government in 2011 (DFE, 2011) and relentlessly pursued thereafter, represented a radical departure from previous kinds of initial teacher education partnership. While it is entirely consistent with a neo-liberal agenda, with its strong regulatory framework and appeal to market mechanisms, it is also underpinned by a particular conception of teaching as a craft - 'best learnt as an apprentice observing a master craftsman or woman' (Gove, 2010). In 2014 the Government established a Review of Initial Teacher Training, led by a primary school headteacher, Sir Andrew Carter. This signalled the recognition of teacher education as a 'policy problem', adopting Cochran-Smith's term. The ensuing report, published in early 2015, was more nuanced than might have been anticipated although a number of profound tensions emerge from a closer analytical reading; four of these tensions are similar to those previously defined by Cochran-Smith and two are newly emergent. This paper identifies and discusses these tensions as they appear in the Carter Review and relates them to wider debates about the links between teaching, teacher education, evidence and research and to policy making processes in education.
spellingShingle Mutton, T
Burn, K
Menter, I
Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title_full Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title_fullStr Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title_full_unstemmed Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title_short Deconstructing the Carter Review: competing conceptions of quality in England’s ‘school-led’ system of initial teacher education
title_sort deconstructing the carter review competing conceptions of quality in england s school led system of initial teacher education
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