Accountability, scapegoating and encouraging rebellious joys: Teaching in England

IF 1.4 Q3 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Carla Solvason
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Abstract

This article suggests that the rise in referrals for children seen as having specific educational needs in England is the inevitable outcome of a system with ever-rising expectations and accountability. It suggests two key reasons for this. The first is that the increased pressures upon teachers lead to them needing a ‘scapegoat’ to point the finger at when they fail to meet those unreasonable expectations. The child being ‘unable to perform’ is the last get-out clause available to them. The second is that the toxicity created by the mounting pressure on teachers significantly impacts teacher well-being. Tired, fraught and harried teachers are not in a position to offer a safe and secure learning environment for the children that they teach. The optimal conditions for the successful performance of both teacher and child—based upon potential, unconditional positive regard and care—have been eroded from the heart of education. Children are not failing; the system is failing them. In light of this, this article encourages all educators to rebelliously see the positive potential of all the children they work with and to be strengthened by those ‘moments of light’ that can be celebrated in even the smallest steps taken towards positive development.

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问责制、替罪羊和鼓励叛逆的快乐:英国的教学
这篇文章表明,在英国,被认为有特殊教育需求的儿童转诊人数的增加是一个期望和责任不断提高的系统的必然结果。它提出了两个主要原因。首先,教师面临的压力越来越大,当他们无法满足这些不合理的期望时,他们需要一个“替罪羊”来指责。孩子“不能表现”是他们最后的免责条款。其次,教师压力增加所产生的毒性显著影响了教师的幸福感。疲惫、忧虑和烦恼的教师无法为他们所教的孩子提供一个安全可靠的学习环境。教师和儿童都能成功发挥的最佳条件——基于潜力、无条件的积极关注和关怀——已经从教育的核心被侵蚀了。孩子们没有失败;这个系统让他们失望。鉴于此,这篇文章鼓励所有教育工作者叛逆地看到与他们一起工作的所有孩子的积极潜力,并通过那些“光明时刻”得到加强,即使是朝着积极发展迈出的最小步骤也可以庆祝。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
15.40%
发文量
52
期刊介绍: This well-established and respected journal covers the whole range of learning difficulties relating to children in mainstream and special schools. It is widely read by nasen members as well as other practitioners, administrators advisers, teacher educators and researchers in the UK and overseas. The British Journal of Special Education is concerned with a wide range of special educational needs, and covers all levels of education pre-school, school, and post-school.
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