On successful completion of the module, students will be able to:
Locate legislation, policy and guidance regarding education within the context of political, cultural and economic trends in wider society;
Understand political ideologies and their relationship to educational ideologies;
Identify the key drivers of education policy, understand their perspectives and evaluate their influence;
Develop a personal and defensible perspective regarding education policy, taking account of ethical considerations.
This module reviews education policy within its wider societal context, with particular focus on the period after the 1944 Education Act.
Students will consider:
The nature and impact of wider societal factors, such as economics and culture;
The development of political ideologies, their perspectives on education and their relationship with education ideologies;
The perspectives and influence of key players such as governments, the market, professionals, parents, pupils/students, consumers and taxpayers.
Illustrative themes include access, selection, equal opportunity, curriculum content and control, state control / professional autonomy, evaluation / accountability, education expansion and education funding.
This module will be taught using a mixture of workshops and tutorials, some of which will be student-led. Students could be expected to prepare for the sessions by reading set texts and completion of tasks set in class or via the VLE and will be expected to take part in a wide range of learning activities
Students may be required to prepare and present brief presentations as the basis for discussion.
Workshops
Contact hours: 30
Intended Group size: 50
Tutorials
Contact hours: 1
Intended group size: 2
e-Tutoring
Contact hours: 2
Intended Group size: 1
Guided independent study
Hours: 167
Further details relating to assessment
Group poster presentation designed to give incentive for structured group work and sharing of ideas without group work impacting directly upon individual student mark.