eprintid: 10023302 rev_number: 31 eprint_status: archive userid: 587 source: pure dir: disk0/10/02/33/02 datestamp: 2017-10-08 02:09:00 lastmod: 2020-02-12 19:35:22 status_changed: 2019-02-27 17:43:22 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Turvey, A creators_name: Yandell, J creators_name: Ali, L title: English as a site of cultural negotiation and contestation divisions: UCL divisions: A01 divisions: B16 divisions: B14 divisions: J77 keywords: Standards-based reforms, teacher identity, narrative-based inquiry, culture, dialogic abstract: We offer this piece as an essay, a dialogic, many-voiced attempt to represent the tensions and contradictions in our work and the work that goes on in London schools. Locating our work within a polyphonic, narrative-based tradition of inquiry into practice (Burgess & Hardcastle, 1991; Doecke & McClenaghan, 2011; Parr, 2010; van de Ven & Doecke, 2011), we start with two stories arising out of our work as teacher educators. These stories provide insights into the effects of standards-based reforms on the lived experiences of school pupils and their teachers in England. We argue that they show something of the ways in which these changes in schooling are profoundly reshaping social relationships and subjectivities. To chart the effects of these changes is important, in our view. And yet, for all the discursive and institutional power of the standards-based reforms, they fail to provide an adequate account of the complexity of what goes on in English classrooms. The agency of teachers and learners, effaced by the dominant discourse, is continually being reasserted, continually threatening to undermine the false simplicities of the standards. Questions of identity, of how learners and teachers alike are situated – and situate themselves – in history and culture, though absent from the dominant discourse, cannot so easily be dismissed. These questions are ones that we encourage our student teachers to take seriously and to address in their writing. We include in this piece substantial extracts from the writing of one of these students: Leila’s reflexive contribution speaks back to the standards-based reforms, offering a very different account of her own learning and that of her pupils. We do not pretend to offer a neat resolution to these conflicting discourses; what Leila’s account provides, however, is a reason to be hopeful. date: 2012-09 date_type: published oa_status: green language: eng primo: open primo_central: open_green verified: verified_manual elements_id: 1103794 medium: 3 lyricists_name: Yandell, John lyricists_id: JYAND53 actors_name: Woodward, Jack actors_id: JWOOA60 actors_role: owner full_text_status: public publication: English Teaching: Practice and Critique volume: 11 number: 3 pagerange: 26-44 refereed: TRUE issn: 1175-8708 citation: Turvey, A; Yandell, J; Ali, L; (2012) English as a site of cultural negotiation and contestation. English Teaching: Practice and Critique , 11 (3) pp. 26-44. Green open access document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10023302/1/ETPC_JYAT1210v13.docx