Abstract

The interest in teachers’ discourses and vocabularies has for a long time been studied under the rubric of knowledge, most notably teachers’ professional knowledge. This interest can be traced back to Shulman’s distinction between different kinds of teacher knowledge and Schwab’s interest in the role of practical reasoning and judgement in teaching. Within the research, a distinction can be found between a more narrow approach that focuses on teachers’ propositional or theoretical knowledge and a more encompassing approach in which teachers’ knowledge is not only the knowledge for teachers generated elsewhere, but also the knowledge of teachers. This is the ‘stock of knowledge’ gained from a range of sources and experiences, including teachers’ ongoing engagement with the practice of teaching itself. In this paper, we focus on the role of teachers’ talk in their achievement of agency. We explore how, in what way and to what extent such talk helps or hinders teachers in exerting control over and giving direction to their everyday practices, bearing in mind that such practices are not just the outcome of teachers’ judgements and actions, but are also shaped by the structures and cultures within which teachers work.

Highlights

  • The interest in teachers’ discourses and vocabularies has for a long time been studied under the rubric of knowledge, most notably teachers’ professional knowledge

  • Against the tendency to think of agency as a capacity or ability individuals possess, we have pursued an ecological understanding of agency that focuses on the question how agency is achieved in concrete settings and under particular ecological conditions and circumstances (Biesta & Tedder, 2006)

  • We have tried to characterize the different ways in which the teachers in our project spoke about their practice; we have tried to find out where such talk comes from, including the wider discourses that inform and shape teachers’ talk; and we have tried to shed light on the ways in which their talk plays a role in the achievement of agency

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Summary

Introduction

The interest in teachers’ discourses and vocabularies has for a long time been studied under the rubric of knowledge, most notably teachers’ professional knowledge. What is clear from the discussion above is that such resources—more concretely, the way teachers talk about and understand education, the school and their role as a teacher—provide an important window on the situation they are in; a reflective window both to perceive and to evaluate what is going on and what is absent or missing.

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