Abstract:In this article, I seek to extend the geographies of education, youth and young people by offering an account of the significant shifts taking place in contemporary English state education around the production and use of data. I present material from pupils, for whom the changes are putatively made, whose voices are absent in existing educational and sociological literature on data in schools. I do this through an exploration of one specific feature of school datascapes: the use of data to create and maintain… Show more
“…Hence, we feel it is time to give more room to alternative imaginations and narrations. Scientists in educational research and geographies of education point out that post-structural concepts such as relational space and socio-material approaches to education enable us to understand classrooms and schools as networks, assemblages, and affective school datascapes (Fenwick and Edwards, 2010;Finn, 2016;Fox, 2009).…”
“…Hence, we feel it is time to give more room to alternative imaginations and narrations. Scientists in educational research and geographies of education point out that post-structural concepts such as relational space and socio-material approaches to education enable us to understand classrooms and schools as networks, assemblages, and affective school datascapes (Fenwick and Edwards, 2010;Finn, 2016;Fox, 2009).…”
“…To use the term may imply that it has relevance and substance as a way to capture something tangible and singular about a school as a whole. As Finn argues (Finn, 2015), it might be more accurate to refer to 'moments', pockets and 'atmospheres' within classrooms and schools, which are dynamic, changeable and fleeting (such as the moment with which we opened the article).…”
Section: Ethos In Poststructuralist Perspective: Engaging With and Thmentioning
General rightsThis document is made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the reference above. Full terms of use are available: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/pure/about/ebr-terms • The research was enabled by a grant from Creativity, Culture and Education. what we describe as 'considerate, convivial and capacious' school ethos. We aim thereby to value the achievements of such schools; provide tools to contest dominant discourses around ethos; and advocate more critical and reflexive approaches to researching the practices, orientations and social relationships of the 'worlds' enacted by and within schools.
“…Finn, 2015). Embedded in these moves is a shift from teaching to learning as the focus of pedagogical work, and the consequent re-positioning of teachers as accountable for individual and aggregate learning outcomes.…”
Section: Scientisation and Datafication Of Education Governancementioning
This article discusses the effects of the datafication and digitalisation of education policy in the context of the Russian Federation. It taps into the policies and practices invented as a result of rising audit cultures and the scientisation and datafication of education governance. These processes turn sites of public examinations into sites of numerical data production on education, and make school systems accountable to data production. The article draws on the notions of power and the non-human object, as developed by Actor-Network-Theory scholars, in order to make sense of the recent introduction of obligatory video surveillance equipment during public examinations. The article argues that demands for accountability and data objectivity have led to a complex surveillance regime -a surveillance assemblage -that leads to intensifying observation through various technical means and new data, i.e. data on data production. Video surveillance is called upon to act as a mediator that translates and holds parts of the fragile assessment-network together by coercing each participant into the role of docile data producer. The introduction of video surveillance manifests and endorses a deep mistrust of the human being, translates data objectivity into a procedural matter and opens up new business opportunities for commercial surveillance and security sectors.
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