““The last bastion of democracy”: teachers’ perceptions of the democratic potential of English curriculum”

Title
““The last bastion of democracy”: teachers’ perceptions of the democratic potential of English curriculum”
Publication Date
2024-11-20
Author(s)
Barton, Georgina
Riddle, Stewart
Lowien, Nathan
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8907-2198
Email: nlowien2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:nlowien2
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1108/ETPC-08-2024-0127
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/64656
Abstract

Purpose – Faced with increasing systemic constraints and pressures, secondary school English teachers often implement transactional approaches to pedagogy and curriculum aimed at improving student results on external exams, which are then used to rank schools. Despite the pressure to teach this way, teachers acknowledge the power of literature, literacy and language in the English curriculum as vehicles for educating students to be critical readers of texts for a democratic society. As such, the purpose of this paper is to share perspectives of secondary English teachers in relation to the democratic potential of their subject.

Design/methodology/approach – Using a qualitative case study method, this paper shares data from six Australian secondary school English teachers who work in culturally diverse schools. Teachers were interviewed about their perspectives regarding how the Australian English curriculum enabled and/or constrained the teaching of critical and creative thinking in support of a democratic society.

Findings – Using Marri’s model of multicultural democratic education, interview data were deductively analyzed to identify elements of the model, including critical pedagogies, disciplinary content and community building. Teachers were concerned that building critical literacy skills was minimized by the system and students’ personal dispositions.

Originality/value – The English teachers in this study held a strong belief that the subject of English could emancipate students, although they felt it might be “the last bastion” for a democratic education.

Link
Citation
English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 23(4), p. 475-491
ISSN
1175-8708
2059-5727
Start page
475
End page
491

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