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Article

Schools, teachers, and curriculum change: A balancing act?

Details

Citation

Priestley M (2011) Schools, teachers, and curriculum change: A balancing act?. Journal of Educational Change, 12 (1), pp. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10833-010-9140-z

Abstract
Educational change is a fact of life for teachers across the world, as schools are subjected to constant and ubiquitous pressures to innovate. And, yet, many school practices remain remarkably persistent in the face of such innovation. This paradox of innovation without change is perplexing for policymakers and practitioners alike. This paper investigates the gap between policy and practice, between innovation and the changes in social practices that occur in response to such innovation. It draws upon empirical data from two case studies in Scotland — schools responding to new curriculum policy—exploring contrasting approaches to the management of innovation. One is a laissez faire approach, and the other a more directive managerial strategy. Through an analytical separation of culture, structure, and agency, derived from the social theory of Margaret Archer, the paper sheds light on the social processes that accompanied innovation in these two settings demonstrating how teacher culture and differing management styles impact upon externally initiated policy.

Keywords
Agency; Change; Culture; Curriculum; Innovation; Interdisciplinary; Structure; Educational change; Curriculum change; Educational innovation; Teachers

Journal
Journal of Educational Change: Volume 12, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date28/02/2011
URL
PublisherSpringer
ISSN1389-2843
eISSN1573-1812

People (1)

Professor Mark Priestley

Professor Mark Priestley

Professor, Education

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