Teacher education in Wales: Towards an enduring legacy?

Gary Beauchamp, Martin Jephcote

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

An analysis of teacher education in Wales demonstrates that the processes of policy making and, in turn, their implementation are complex and non-linear and that disputation between government and ‘stakeholders’ and also between sometimes competing stakeholders opens up space for mediation. Closing that space, that is, the ability of government to ensure that its policies are enacted in the ways in which it intended, or indeed for a stakeholder to assert its priorities, depends on the exercise of power and control over those who, in different ways, may work to mediate and recontextualise policy. For any particular policy initiative there is a ‘field’ of actors each with its own ability to exercise power and control and, the more contentious and in the public eye the policy, the larger the field and the more dispute there is likely to be. Also, the bigger the field, the bigger the struggle that government is likely to have to make, implement and enact its policy. At the heart of such struggles are ideological differences but set within a wider set of social and political interests. So, as Taylor et al (1997) suggest, ‘we need to observe politics in action, tracing how economic and social forces, institutions, people, interests, events and chance interact.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationTeacher Education in Times of Change
Subtitle of host publicationResponding to Challenges Across the UK and Ireland
PublisherPolicy Press
Pages109-124
Number of pages16
ISBN (Electronic)9781447318552
ISBN (Print)9781447318545
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2015

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