Teachers’ work under responsibilising policies: An analysis of educators’ views on China’s 2021 educational reforms
Teachers’ work under responsibilising policies: An analysis of educators’ views on China’s 2021 educational reforms
This article offers unique insights into the relationship between education policy and teachers’ work. It considers how globally pervasive responsibilising regimes make teachers’ work more burdensome. Drawing on interviews with 15 school teachers, this article shows how China’s 2021 Double Burden Reduction Policy has reconfigured educators’ (class)work practices and pedagogical approaches. Specifically, it unpacks the policy mechanisms that: 1) condense school time and make teachers’ work more methodical and 2) prolong teachers' working hours that are dedicated to offering students after-school educational support, thus reducing the demand for shadow education. This article argues that this policy shifts the education burden away from tutorial enterprises and parents and onto the teachers, which illustrates a case of the impact of policy regimes on teachers’ work within the broader context of neoliberal globalisation. Moreover, this article produces a novel typological spectrum–submission, substantiation, and scepticism–to capture and understand the diverse ways in which teachers may respond to policy-led changes to their professional work globally. Overall, it generates new knowledge on the impact of homogenising education policies on teachers’ work and the heterogeneity of teachers’ responses to these policies, thus contributing conceptually to the wider field of policy sociology in education.
China, double burden reduction policy, education policy, shadow education, teachers’ burden, teachers’ work
Gupta, Achala
a30fa79d-e9dc-4237-93d4-bdaf8816780a
Zhao, Xi
7634e884-a958-4cd3-a069-82edb5949d63
14 July 2023
Gupta, Achala
a30fa79d-e9dc-4237-93d4-bdaf8816780a
Zhao, Xi
7634e884-a958-4cd3-a069-82edb5949d63
Gupta, Achala and Zhao, Xi
(2023)
Teachers’ work under responsibilising policies: An analysis of educators’ views on China’s 2021 educational reforms.
Journal of Education Policy.
(doi:10.1080/02680939.2023.2236067).
Abstract
This article offers unique insights into the relationship between education policy and teachers’ work. It considers how globally pervasive responsibilising regimes make teachers’ work more burdensome. Drawing on interviews with 15 school teachers, this article shows how China’s 2021 Double Burden Reduction Policy has reconfigured educators’ (class)work practices and pedagogical approaches. Specifically, it unpacks the policy mechanisms that: 1) condense school time and make teachers’ work more methodical and 2) prolong teachers' working hours that are dedicated to offering students after-school educational support, thus reducing the demand for shadow education. This article argues that this policy shifts the education burden away from tutorial enterprises and parents and onto the teachers, which illustrates a case of the impact of policy regimes on teachers’ work within the broader context of neoliberal globalisation. Moreover, this article produces a novel typological spectrum–submission, substantiation, and scepticism–to capture and understand the diverse ways in which teachers may respond to policy-led changes to their professional work globally. Overall, it generates new knowledge on the impact of homogenising education policies on teachers’ work and the heterogeneity of teachers’ responses to these policies, thus contributing conceptually to the wider field of policy sociology in education.
Text
Manuscript_with_author_details
- Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 10 January 2025.
Request a copy
Text
Teachers work under responsibilising policies an analysis of educators views on China s 2021 educational reforms
- Version of Record
Text
Manuscript with author details
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 10 July 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2023
Published date: 14 July 2023
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords:
China, double burden reduction policy, education policy, shadow education, teachers’ burden, teachers’ work
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479082
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479082
ISSN: 0268-0939
PURE UUID: a349bb33-5664-4527-bb1e-ac847599aeca
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 19 Jul 2023 17:13
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Xi Zhao
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics