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Articles

Locating post-16 professionalism: public spaces as dissenting spaces

Pages 64-77 | Received 22 Jul 2014, Accepted 02 Oct 2014, Published online: 18 Feb 2015
 

Abstract

Locating post-16 professionalism explores the ways in which teachers in the UK and the USA engaged in digitally mediated communication incidentally narrate their professional selves during extended exchanges about the process of post-qualification registration. Drawing on a theoretical framework derived from participatory democracy, the study is mindful of how citizens in public spaces express support or opposition to government policies. During their extended and intense discussion, the teachers involved discuss who legitimately defines and what justifiably bestows professional status. The paper is intent on questioning the location of professionalism rather than its definition. This spatial dimension is central to the argument that unfolds. Teacher professionalism is most frequently positioned within the classroom; a space that was once conceived as offering scope for strategic compliance. More recently, the classroom has become conceptualised as a diminutive space enabling of little more than teacher survival through tactical resistance. My argument is that teacher professionalism may also be located in other spaces, spaces that allow teachers to transcend the scripted pedagogies of the classroom. In these other spaces, teacher professionalism is located within open critique, defiance and dissent, which allow teachers to extend their pedagogic focus and explore dimensions of professionalism that matter to them: what it means, how and by whom it is conferred.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1. The discussion revolves around the mandatory membership of the Institute for Learning in the UK. To maintain focus on professionalism (rather than the rights and wrongs of a particular organisation, the Institute for Learning) I have used the term ‘professional body' throughout.

2. I have used pseudonyms rather than names as they appear in the thread. Although the material is available in the public domain, in re-contextualising it here, I have sought to offer some degree of anonymity.

3. I have avoided wherever possible explicit reference to the specific corporation involved as this is not central to the line of argument I am pursuing and may cause unnecessary distraction.

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