Navigating the ambiguous policy landscape of student participation
Loading...
Date
Authors
Graham, Anne
Bessell, Sharon
Adamson, Elizabeth
Truscott, Julia
Simmons, Catharine
Thomas, Nigel
Gardon, Lyn
Johnson, Andrew
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Student participation at school is receiving heightened attention
through international evidence connecting it to a range of benefits
including student learning, engagement, citizenship and wellbeing, as well as to overall school improvement. Yet the notion
of student participation remains an ambiguous concept, and one
that challenges many deeply entrenched norms of traditional
schooling.
Informed by understandings of ‘participation’ linked to the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child, this article takes the
Australian state of New South Wales (NSW) as a case study to
explore how student participation is currently articulated in educational policy. It reports the findings of an analysis of 142 state
and federal government policy-related documents, along with
qualitative interview data from nine policy personnel. The findings
suggest that students are conceptualised within these policies in
contradictory ways, interpretations of participation are diverse yet
frequently instrumentalist, and there is little conceptual coherence
across the educational policy landscape in NSW in relation to
‘student participation’. The findings are discussed in light of international interest around student participation. The analytical framework used in this analysis is proposed as a possible tool for
critically examining the place and purpose of student participation
at school, regardless of jurisdiction.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Education Policy
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description