1 / 12

Further education in a time of change: policy, practice, profession TUI conference 6 th Feb 2016

Further education in a time of change: policy, practice, profession TUI conference 6 th Feb 2016. Bernie Grummell and Michael Murray Department of Adult & Community Education, National University of Ireland Maynooth. Where is Further Education now?.

malton
Download Presentation

Further education in a time of change: policy, practice, profession TUI conference 6 th Feb 2016

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Further education in a time of change: policy, practice, professionTUI conference 6th Feb 2016 Bernie Grummell and Michael Murray Department of Adult & Community Education, National University of Ireland Maynooth.

  2. Where is Further Education now? • Sector of education being formalised and professionalism at the moment (FET) • Situated on boundaries of formal/informal education; and second level/higher education • Impact of employability, performativity, accreditation & professionalism on FE? • Nature of knowledge, knowing & knowers? • Social Justice implication for FE ? • training/vocational to new managerialist ethos • reconstitution via performativity & professionalism • impact of technical & operational definition

  3. What is your definition of further education?

  4. FE – defined by what it’s not? i) FE defined by negative comparative definition • ‘education and training other than primary or postprimary education or higher education and training’. (Qualifications Educ. & Training Act 1999) • ‘education and training which usually occurs outside of post-primary schooling but which is not part of the third-level system.’ (Teaching Council 2011: 2) • Defined by a vacuum or absence – what it’s not ii) Defined by Outputs: list of programmes, providers, awards • Reliant and reactive to other sectors of education, or constrained within outputs frame • No focus on what FE is; actual knowledge claims and distinctive characteristics?

  5. Further Education in Ireland – what is it? • Networked and organisational features: ‘linkages with other services, such as employment, training, area partnership, welfare, youth, school, juvenile liaison, justice and community and voluntary sector interests. FE programmes are delivered locally by the VECs & by second level schools.’ (DES 2004) • Economic and social goals of Further Education • Organisational responsibility (ETB structures, operating across second, further and higher education) – impact of different work cultures & education ethos? • Lifelong Learning frame (White Paper, EU) – social cohesion, focus on individual responsibility Employability discourse ‘technical knowledge, core skills and work experience’ (Enterprise Ireland)

  6. Vocational and training focus • Vocational & training focus, responsive to market needs and creating employability • Class-orientation, training working class/ marginalised groups for labour force • Brine (2006) high & low knowledge-skilled workers – FE focused on latter group. • Gendered nature of FE – Male-dominated apprenticeships & female service occupations • FE creating alternative route/ access to HE • working with diverse non-traditional students • Recognition of awards & RPL, NQF frame • Explore social justice implications?

  7. Current FE staffing & structural issues • Philosophy – adult ed/ education/ training • Organisational structure - myriad of funders, dual govt. responsibility (DES/ DETE) • Staff – 2nd level (VEC) teachers, or recruited from industry, contract tutors (diff conditions) • Privileging practice & experiential knowledge, but lower recognition of this knowledge • growth in casualisation in austerity and neoliberal context; lower status & conditions • Lack of structural co-ordination: spanning FE/ 2nd level/Higher Education sectors

  8. Operational definitions & discourses • Performativity focus on outcomes & training rather than learner or learning processes • LLL - consultative rather than participatory approach (i.e. learner charters;‘learner-centeredness’ equals ‘independent learning’) • Def of teacher: expert-led ‘hierarchical, authoritarian & undemocratic’(Connolly 2007) • AE facilitation, learner-centred critical approach difficult to fit into performativity demands & not recognised in professionalism • Knowledge standardised, with subject-centred curriculum

  9. i) New Managerial demands of Global era • Structured governance & regulatory reform • Rise of professionalism & performativity • Training for global market in crisis rather than community, driven by risk & uncertainty • Outcomes model as form of social regulation • Less focus on communal & learning aspects • Accountability focus on ‘product not the person…what is counted and countable. A culture of carelessness is created’ (Lynch et al 2012) • Disadvantages the already disadvantaged

  10. Responses of Further Education • ‘struggles over the control of the field of judgment and its values’ (Ball, 2006, p.144) • response to accountability & performativity legitimates underlying new managerial logic • Unquestioned assumptions of FE creating jobs for future market needs & structuring 2nd chance learning for marginalised groups • Uncomfortable position of staff - border of FE reality (learners, tutors) & system demands • Counter-hegemonies & resistances – working in/ resisting/ reforming the system, opting out (unfunded), role of representative bodies like trade unions?

  11. Your reflections & experiences? • Your knowledge and perception of the further education sector? • Your own experience as a learner ? • Experience as staff working in FE/ or working in other education sector(s)?

  12. References • Murray, Michael J., Grummell, Bernie and Anne Ryan 2014 Further Education and Training in Ireland: History, Politics, Practice. (eds) MACE: Maynooth • Grummell, Bernie and Michael J. Murray 2015 ‘A contested profession: employability, performativity and professionalism in Irish further education’, Journal of Educational Administration and History, 47, (4): 1-22 • Lynch, Kathleen; Grummell, Bernie and Dympna Devine 2012 New Managerialism in Education: Commercialization, Carelessness and Gender. Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke. Second Edition Reprinted 2015.

More Related