Activities per year
Abstract
Achieving changes to education practices and structures is a significant issue facing reformers internationally, and researchers have confronted how such changes, and the conditions for these, might be conceptualized. These issues resonate particularly as researchers grapple with imagining a post-COVID-19 landscape where social and educational norms may change. Tyack and Tobin, in their 1994 article ‘The “Grammar” of Schooling: Why has it been so hard to change?’ argued that several features of the American education system are so persistent as to warrant being understood as the ‘grammar’ of schooling. In this article, we reconceptualize this ‘grammar’ by taking seriously Tyack and Tobin’s insistence that ‘grammar’ organises meaning. Starting here, we argue that what they took to be grammatical features are the products and not the producers of meaning. We draw on the cases of the United States and England to argue that four international discourses have performed this meaning-making work: industrialization; welfarism; neoliberalism and neoconservatism. These are the ‘grammars’ of schooling—and of society. Their discursive products, including age grading and sorting into subjects are, we suggest, ‘lexical’ features that express the grammar. We use lexical features to explain the multi-directional interplay between discourse and educational feature: the lexical may endure longer than the grammatical, changes to which may be effected and/or legitimated through appealing to a lexical feature. We conclude by outlining key implications for realizing and conceptualizing educational change, including for a post-COVID-19 landscape.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Journal of Educational Change |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 Aug 2020 |
Keywords
- Educational change; grammar of schooling; lexical features; COVID-19
Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms
- Global inequalities
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Thinking with ‘lexical’ features to reconceptualize the ‘grammar’ of schooling: Shifting the focus from school to society'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.-
Episode 6 - From the Grammar to the Lexicon of Schooling: Rethinking Educational Change
Courtney, S. (Interviewee)
1 Sept 2022Activity: Internal positions, career professional development, other peer review and other › Other › Research
-
Tallinn University
Courtney, S. (Secondee)
17 Nov 2021Activity: External visiting positions or secondments › Visiting an external academic institution › Research
-
Bryan Mann
Courtney, S. (Host)
5 Mar 2019 → 8 Mar 2019Activity: Hosting a visitor › Hosting an academic visitor › Research