Abstract
The article explores the impact of Individual Action Planning (IAP) on Postgraduate Certification in Education student teachers, in terms of whether it can be seen as a process of empowerment or discipline. The context of changes in teacher education introduced by recent Governments is established and the literature on empowerment, discipline and education is reviewed. The findings of the reactions of a group of student teachers to the IAP process are reported, with a focus on whether they experienced Action Planning as enabling or controlling. The authors conclude that the main perception of IAPs by the student teachers has more to do with empowerment than discipline, but that neither concept fully encompasses those responses. They propose that further study is needed to explore whether a system of self-surveillance is operating through IAP.