Open this publication in new window or tab >>2025 (English)In: Book of abstracts, WERA TASK FORCE: Global Research in Extended Education Conference, 2025 / [ed] Lina Lago, Linköping: Linköping University Electronic Press, 2025, p. 138-139Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
In 2011 a new teacher education program, Extended school (180 credit), later reffered to School Age Education ( SAE, 180) was launched. Research interested in the conditions for the new profession found that many SAE teachers experience difficulties and operate in a structurally subordinate position in the workplace, struggling with an underdog mentality in relation to other groups of teachers (e.g., Haglund & Boström 2020). SAE teachers also construct their professional identity in a field of tension between an older social-pedagogical care tradition and new forms of governance based in a school subject-oriented educational tradition (Ackesjö et al. 2019). However, instead of focusing on how organizational and profession oriented frameworks shape the profession, we direct our gaze to the importance for the professional role that new SAE teachers attribute to their personal social commitment and their independent intellectual and moral reasoning.
Theory
School is regarded as an economically, socially and culturally contestedplace, inextricably linked to issues of power and interest. Rather than separated from the dynamics of politics, schools are are viwed as contested spheres that incorporate and express societal struggles over knowledge, forms of authority, values, roles, identities, etcetera (Giroux 1985). Teachers’ work accordingly can not be reduced to the instrumental task of implementing the curriculum and, like a technician, only enforcing educational decisions that have been made at a political and bureaucratic level.
Aim and research question
The aim of this paper is to examine how graduated SAE teachers’ reason about their personal motivations and positions in relation to curriculum management and educational policy decisions. More precisely, we examine the question:How do graduated SAE teachers’ reason about their own intellectual and moral agency in relation to curriculum governance and educational policy decisions?
Methodology
The selection of respondents is strategic and consists of 30 graduated SAEteachers’ who have an interest in societal and moral issues in relation to the teaching assignment. Data consist of 30 reflection texts and individual semi-structured interviews with four of the respondents. In the interpretation of the data a departure is taken in Donald Davidson’s (2001) Principle of Charity. This means that reflection texts and interview statements is analyzed in terms of rational actions from which conceptions and ideas about actual phenomena can be inferred, rather than, for example, reconstructing linguistic discourses. Fora detailed description of the theoretical perspective and analysis procedure, see e.g. Halldén, Haglund & Strömdahl 2008.
Result
We hope to contribute to the field with an interest in the profession’s mission by broadening the picture of which factors, according to teachers,that may shape teacher identities, teachers’ conceptions of the mission andview of the special character of the profession. We will give some examples of a professional self-image and an approach to the teaching role where intellectual and moral independence is prioritized as an in alienable part of one’s professional practice.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Linköping: Linköping University Electronic Press, 2025
National Category
Social Sciences
Research subject
Studies in the Educational Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-58482 (URN)9789180758635 (ISBN)
Conference
WERA TASK FORCE Global Research in Extended Education Conference, Linköping University September 24–27, 2025
2025-11-282025-11-282025-12-01Bibliographically approved