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Using Butler to understand the multiplicity and variability of policy reception

journal contribution
posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Gowlett, Amanda KeddieAmanda Keddie, M Mills, P Renshaw, P Christie, D Geelan, S Monk
Understanding how teachers make sense of education policy is important. We argue that an exploration of teacher reactions to policy requires an engagement with theory focused on the formation of ‘the subject’ since this form of theorisation addresses the creation of a seemingly coherent identity and attitude while acknowledging variation across different places and people. In this paper, we propose the utility of Butlerian ideas because of the focus on subjectivity that her work entails and the account she gives for social norms regulating people’s actions and attitudes. We use Butler’s stance on how ‘cultural intelligibility’ is formed to account for the complex, messy and sometimes contradictory ‘take up’ of curriculum policy by 10 teachers at a secondary school case study in Queensland, Australia. We use the phrase ‘policy reception’ to signify a particular theoretical line of thought we are forming with our application of Butlerian theory to the analysis of teacher attitudes toward curriculum policy, and to distinguish it from ‘policy interpretation’, ‘policy translation’ and ‘policy enactment’.

History

Journal

Journal of education policy

Volume

30

Issue

2

Pagination

149 - 164

Publisher

Routledge

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

0268-0939

eISSN

1464-5106

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Taylor & Francis