Abstract
This paper explores primary teachers' accounts of their responses to major changes in the curriculum and assessment system in England, which has recently re-designated expected standards of achievement and progress. Analysis is informed by Foucauldian poststructural understandings of power/ knowledge and truth to examine how they reorganise their practices as mathematics teachers within a policy context which continues to compel schools to focus on performance. By means of a small-scale empirical study, we identify the tensions created when the 'rules of the game' change and how technological assessment tools require and enable teachers to reproduce levels and labels to categorise pupils. Our aim in undertaking this analysis is not to compare teachers' assessment practices to an ideal, beyond policy, but to illustrate how government-driven changes to assessment are insufficient to change underlying discourses of performativity which ultimately shape practice.
Publication Date
2017-01-01
Publication Title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE TENTH CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICS EDUCATION (CERME10)
First Page
3580
Last Page
3587
Organisational Unit
Institute of Education
Keywords
assessment, Elementary school mathematics, Foucault, governmentality
Recommended Citation
Pratt, N., & Alderton, J. (2017) 'It's different, it's difficult, it's unknown': Letting go of levels', PROCEEDINGS OF THE TENTH CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICS EDUCATION (CERME10), , pp. 3580-3587. Retrieved from https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/pioe-research/105