Self‐management and School Inspection: complementary forms of surveillance and control in the primary school
- 1 September 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Oxford Review of Education
- Vol. 23 (3) , 345-364
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0305498970230306
Abstract
This paper seeks to argue, on the basis of data from research in a primary school, that the self‐surveillance systems of self‐management are closely interconnected with the school inspection process. Further, self‐surveillance managerial systems, such as School Development Planning, are reinforced by the constant gaze of the inspectorate. Five modes of teacher response to the impact of the controls are explored: anticipation of surveillance, self‐surveillance, impression management, secondary adjustment and fragmentation. It is argued that the nature of the relationship between inspection and self‐management makes for a more rigorous and pervasive form of control than could be achieved by the use of one form alone. Inspectors are the absent presence in the school, influencing and constraining the decision‐making involved in the formulation of the School Development Plan and activities arising from it. The result of this process is reduced rather than enhanced autonomy for the self‐managing primary school. Furthermore, initiatives in the school which promised school improvement were marginalised in the development planning process.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primary headship, state policy and the challenge of the 1990s: an exceptional story that disproves total hegemonic ruleJournal of Education Policy, 1993
- Educational restructuring: international perspectivesJournal of Education Policy, 1992