Risky Choices

Autonomy and surveillance in secondary English departments

  • Claudia Rozas Gómez University of Auckland
Keywords: secondary English , curriculum, assessment, policy, discourse, subjectivity, neoliberalism, social class.

Abstract

Achievement data from New Zealand secondary schools suggest that students from lower socio-economic communities have fewer opportunities to engage with complex content in subject English. This article examines this phenomenon by drawing on Foucault’s notion of governmentality and considers how a context of simultaneously increased autonomy and surveillance may shape curriculum and assessment choices. To explore these ideas, I use interview data from ten secondary English teachers in the wider Auckland region. I complement Foucault’s (1982) explanation of governmentality with Ball, Maguire, and Braun’s (2012) notion of policy enactment to explore spaces of both compliance and resistance.

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Published
2021-08-06
How to Cite
Rozas Gómez, C. (2021). Risky Choices: Autonomy and surveillance in secondary English departments. Teachers’ Work, 18(1), 36-51. https://doi.org/10.24135/teacherswork.v18i1.308
Section
Articles