"Children are more than just a statistic. Education is more than government outlines": Primary teachers' perspectives on the standards agenda in England
Abstract
This paper focuses on qualitative findings from a study that investigated primary teachers’ perspectives on the standards agenda in England. Q-methodology was used to investigate the complexity of their perspectives. The study’s Q-methodology findings are published in Education 3-13 (Williams-Brown and Jopling, 2021). This paper focuses on qualitative responses from this study that were completed after the Q-methodology card sort. It focuses on teachers’ overall perspectives on the standards agenda and statements from the card sort that were placed by five participants or more in the extreme columns of the distribution grid. Findings from the study evidence that teachers were not opposed to standards and accountability, but they voiced a variety of concerns that did not focus solely on SATs. These include concerns about perceptions of achievement, experiences of assessment and measures taken to hold teachers and schools accountable for their actions. Teachers did also emphasise concerns with SATs and discussed the need for objectives to be inclusive and consider the needs of children with SEND. The paper concludes by questioning whether this is the time to reconsider standards agenda objectives.Citation
Brown, Z. and Jopling, M. (2021) “Children are more than just a statistic. Education is more than government outlines”: Primary teachers’ perspectives on the standards agenda in England. Educationalfutures, [online] Vol. 12(1). Available at: https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=16042Publisher
British Education Studies AssociationJournal
EducationalfuturesAdditional Links
https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=16042Type
Journal articleLanguage
enDescription
© 2021 The Authors. Published by British Education Studies Association. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence. The published version can be accessed at the following link on the publisher’s website: https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=16042ISSN
1758-2199Collections
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/