Prelims

Critical Perspectives on Educational Policies and Professional Identities

ISBN: 978-1-83753-333-6, eISBN: 978-1-83753-332-9

Publication date: 4 June 2024

Citation

(2024), "Prelims", Waller, R., Andrews, J. and Clark, T. (Ed.) Critical Perspectives on Educational Policies and Professional Identities, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxv. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83753-332-920241018

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Richard Waller, Jane Andrews and Timothy Clark. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


Half Title Page

Critical Perspectives on Educational Policies and Professional Identities

Endorsements

In the field of education, a bridge is often needed between research and practice. This book not only bridges the two but also provides directions for linking research on practice and educational policy. It tells us about practitioners' research in a range of professional settings – it is not fixed in one setting, and it has something to say to professionals in many settings. Whether or not you do research, this book will prompt you to engage with educational policies, navigate the dominant rhetoric and consider solutions emerging from research described in this book. This book explains how societal and political influences shape educational policy. It also suggests how policy may be challenged.

The diversity of approaches is thought-provoking, and there are plenty of ideas and implications that we can take from these chapters: a chapter about research in the primary school setting, for example, can get us thinking about other settings; chapters on the teaching of controversial topics like terrorism and counter-terrorism measures, for example, are helpful in terms of both theory and practice.

More importantly, this book offers a model of supporting doctoral students and researchers to publish their work in order to bring it to a wider audience, where it can actually be of use. Drawing on my own work on communities of writers and writing retreats, the editors decided to co-author and mentor doctoral students, so that students learnt about the publication process. This will not only help educators but will also boost careers. It also means that all this research will not just sit in university archives. Of immediate use to other researchers and Directors of Research will be the chapters where the whole process of writing this book is opened up. So often, the stage of ‘writing up’ research is unexplained, but this book shows the way to develop a community of writers, a practitioner research community. This is how to sustain research and impact. Writing communities and retreats will sustain practitioner researchers, for whom making time for research and writing is a huge challenge. Moreover, in light of the recent warning about the urgent need for a supportive culture for researchers in Education, from the British Educational Research Association (2023), this book shows how to create such a culture through supportive peer review and dedicated time.

Finally, this book shows how to produce real research outputs that speak for and to educational professionals. Other books may focus on research findings or practical implications; this book does both, while opening up the process of practitioner research and writing. This will have more interest to more readers because of the many individual researcher voices that come through – they tell us how and why they did their research. I hope this will not only prompt more people to read and do practitioner research but also embed the idea of communities that bring researchers and practitioners together.

Rowena Murray, Formerly Professor in Education and Director of Research at University of the West of Scotland, now independent Higher Education consultant

Critical Perspectives is a vibrant addition to the academic literature, echoing the spirit of Bathmaker and Harnett’s influential work while carving its own distinct path. Within its pages, a chorus of practitioner–researcher and established academic voices offer a refreshing perspective on doctoral education that extends far beyond the confines of traditional school or college settings.

This book is a must-read for anyone with a stake in doctoral education, providing a rich tapestry of insights into policy and professionalism across diverse landscapes. From Higher Education to the National Health Service, Further Education and Early Years, the authors unravel the complexities with meticulous detail. What emerges is a vivid portrayal of local concerns with a resounding impact that transcends boundaries, resonating across phases, settings and sectors.

What sets this volume apart is its innovative approach to co-production, seamlessly weaving together emerging and established academic voices in each chapter. This dynamic collaboration opens a portal for the researching professional, inviting them to seamlessly transition into a professional researcher role. The book balances academic rigour with a grounded practitioner focus, effortlessly straddling theory and practice, conceptual and empirical realms, honouring the individual of voice entangled within an extensive ecology of agency.

At its core, Critical Perspectives will captivate academics and practitioners with a detailed exploration of the ‘messiness and situatedness’ inherent in the experience of being and becoming an educational professional. The authors skillfully navigate the intricate landscape of constructing, interrogating, and challenging professionalism, unveiling the limitations of a one-size-fits-all approach with poignant clarity.

This volume is more than a departure; it is a welcome revelation. It serves as a powerful reminder that doctoral training goes beyond providing the technical skills required to manage small-scale research project, urging us to embrace knowledge generation that is applied, transdisciplinary, and deeply contextualized. It serves as a catalyst for change, reminding us that engagement with policy is not restricted to interpretation and enactment but includes the invisible activism of not only inevitable but welcome disruption. Critical Perspectives is a vibrant affirmation of the landscape of doctoral education as a realm of endless possibilities and transformative potential.

Dr Carol Azumah Dennis, The Open University

Critical Perspectives on Researching Educational Policies and Professional Identities: Lessons from Doctoral Studies is a wonderful and unique collection of chapters, perfectly showcasing doctoral students' work. Each chapter is cleverly crafted by a recent EdD graduate and their supervisor and makes a perfect volume of co-produced practitioner research projects, undertaken by EdD students at the University of the West of England. This will be particularly useful for other students at the thesis writing stage because the collection provides a very useful catalogue of exciting and relevant topics covered in previous EdD research. I imagine that 3 audiences will be very interested in this book: EdD students; EdD lecturers and course leaders; other HEIs who provide the EdD.

The book is organized into three core sections, each one dealing with a theme of educational practitioner research. The themes skilfully bring together doctoral research projects from EdD students at UWE, ensuring that their research gets disseminated more widely, as well as in a manageable and accessible collection. Prospective students will be able to see relevant examples of research topics and projects, possibly relating to their own sectors and research interests.

I have not seen any collections like this which relate to the professional doctorate in education. This book makes a valuable contribution to the field and an even more valuable resource for students and academics. A major strength of the book is that it represents the most up-to-date research in the field of education, bringing together relevant, current, and interesting doctoral research projects.

The EdD is fast becoming a very popular route to acquiring a doctorate, particularly for educational professionals. This collection of chapters is a much-needed resource; the research content is varied, interesting and pertinent, and this makes it a significant and important contribution to the field of education and doctoral research.

Iona Burnell Reilly, University of East London

How much doctoral research in education disappears after the viva? How much illuminating and critical research about the complex interplay of society, professional identity, policy and practice remains forever unread?

Critical Perspectives on Researching Educational Policies and Professional Identities: Lessons from Doctoral Studies is vitally important because it is the first book to provide a space for early career researchers in education to share key aspects of their doctoral methodologies and findings by co-producing chapters with more experienced academics and a highly credible editorial team. The result is a truly fascinating, theoretically informed practitioner-based insight into education policy and practice at all levels using a range of cutting-edge and often creative methodological approaches.

While each chapter stands alone, offering insights for doctoral researchers, early career researchers, their supervisors and more experienced academics into specific subject and age phases of education research, the chapters also resonate with one another, drawing out key themes that help define and articulate close-to-practice research in its current context. The first theme looks at different ways in which educational professionalism is shaped and contested within society; the second theme highlights different perspectives on professional identity and how professional development might be conceptualized over time; the third theme examines the impact of policy on professional identity and practice, highlighting tensions and modes of resistance.

This means that Critical Perspectives on Researching Educational Policies and Professional Identities: Lessons from Doctoral Studies is highly relevant and a must-read for all academics and practitioners in education who are interested in articulating their research and its value through exploring and applying theory, innovating with and adapting methodologies and experimenting with forms of representation to reach and impact on new audiences.

Professor Tom Dobson, York St John University, School of Education, Language and Psychology

As someone who has been involved in doctoral research for many years, it is clear that this book will be an extremely useful resource for students and supervisors of doctoral research. The book showcases, through careful discussion, the issues of educational policy and professional identities within and through doctoral research. The included research is invaluable in informing practice. The book will therefore be extremely useful in understanding how to support researcher development as well as the broader research community and is therefore highly recommended.

Professor Carol Fuller, Institute of Education, University of Reading

This novel and highly original collection speaks to a range of critical perspectives articulated in the research of a doctoral community at UWE through a rich blend of methodologies.

Each chapter is a collaboration between the doctoral graduates (now early career researchers) and experienced academics who worked as their supervisors. The result is a huge contribution to our understanding of the impact of the doctoral journey on professional identities and practices in education but also to the development of the educational doctorate field itself. This is manifested in Meg Maguire’s concluding appraisal of the body of work curated here, observing how this book casts a lens on how practitioner research enabled by educational doctorates disrupts policy and in so doing is policy work in itself. This gives this collection a tactical status, moving beyond ‘lessons from’ to a form of activism.

This book will be reassuring, inspiring and developmental – politically, conceptually and practically – for anyone involved in an EdD, thinking about doing one or curious about them.

Professor Julian McDougall, Bournemouth University

Title Page

Critical Perspectives on Educational Policies and Professional Identities: Lessons From Doctoral Studies

Edited by

Richard Waller

University of the West of England, UK

Jane Andrews

University of the West of England, UK

And

Timothy Clark

University of the West of England, UK

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

Copyright Page

Emerald Publishing Limited

Emerald Publishing, Floor 5, Northspring, 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 4DL

First edition 2024

Editorial matter and selection © 2024 Richard Waller, Jane Andrews and Timothy Clark.

Individual chapters © 2024 The authors.

Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited.

Reprints and permissions service

Contact: www.copyright.com

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. Any opinions expressed in the chapters are those of the authors. Whilst Emerald makes every effort to ensure the quality and accuracy of its content, Emerald makes no representation implied or otherwise, as to the chapters' suitability and application and disclaims any warranties, express or implied, to their use.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-83753-333-6 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-83753-332-9 (Online)

ISBN: 978-1-83753-334-3 (Epub)

Dedication

We have decided to dedicate this book to Max Weedon, one of the authors in the collection (Chapter 14). Max was tragically killed in a car accident in Barbados on 8th January 2023, just as the process of writing the volume had begun. Max's mother, Kathy Mansfield Higgins, got in touch to tell me the awful news; she had found emails between Max and me discussing ideas for his chapter. In an amazingly brave act, Kathy, herself an academic albeit it an unrelated field, decided to step in and lead the writing of Max's chapter by way of a tribute to him, working with Ciaran Burke who had been Max's internal examiner for his doctoral viva examination in March 2021.

I first met Max when he applied for a place on our EdD Professional Doctorate in Education back in 2015. He was an extremely interesting and deeply passionate man, fiercely intelligent, highly politicized and with a clear sense of social justice. I became Max's Director of Studies for his research, and, most unusually, co-opted two academic colleagues from our Sociology team (Andy Mathers and Sean Creaven) to act as joint supervisors since I felt Max's deep knowledge of social theory was likely to push the boundaries of my own theoretical understanding and test me fully, meaning I wanted some ‘back-up’, intellectually speaking; I was right to do so.

During his studies Max made theoretical breakthroughs and had insights that seasoned academics would be proud of, as his chapter in this collection demonstrates. Max also wrote for publication during his studies, appearing twice in the British Sociological Association's Discover Society online journal, once writing about his doctoral research into the impact of the Prevent strategy, and once offering his reflections on the outcome of the 2019 UK general election.

Max was also an incredibly modest man, and probably had a wider breadth of experience in the UK education system than anyone else I have worked with on the EdD. He had taught in the primary, secondary, further and higher education sectors, designed further and higher education curricula and been a university governor. But Max had many interests outside of education. We shared a love for football, though we supported rival teams – Liverpool for Max and Spurs for me – a source of much banter and good natured ribbing. I only discovered after his death that Max had co-founded an African charity for HIV orphans. From our conversations over the years I knew that Max loved scuba diving, although I didn't know just how good he was at it, and certainly not that he was a highly qualified instructor (hence his trips to the Caribbean).

I also knew Max had a professional background in music, but didn't know until reading his obituaries just how passionate he was about it, how successful a musician he had been and how important he was to developing the careers of numerous others, largely through the establishment of the BA1 record label whilst teaching music at Bath College. In addition to running a record label, Max had also run a music publishing company, and been both a band manager and a sound engineer.

Having been born in Botswana, Max's own musical journey begun as a young passenger on journeys into the African bush where he was exposed to the captivating sounds of legendary bands from the 1960s and 1970s on the Toyota Hilux tape deck. Classical guitar lullabies at bedtime added to his early musical influences. Upon moving from his country of birth to England, Max was an early adopter of the Sony Walkman, which became his constant companion, filling his ears with melodies day in, day out.

During Max's teenage years, the Stone Roses track ‘Fools Gold’ ignited a passion for drumming, leading him to form a band called SHC. Their journey saw them supporting renowned acts like Blur and Spiritualized in the early 1990s. However, his musical evolution didn't stop there. He later transitioned to playing the guitar and, along with his band embarked on a new chapter in Brighton, ultimately becoming known as The Just.

Over time Max's commitment to music only grew stronger, culminating in a formal education that included a degree in music production and not one, but two master's degrees in music and songwriting. This extensive knowledge and experience paved the way for him to inspire and nurture the next generation of musicians through teaching and tutoring, ensuring that his passion for music continues to resonate with and through others. He had been instrumental in launching the careers of numerous musicians including chart topping singer songwriter Gabrielle Alpin, X-Factor star singer Lascel Wood, and Radio 1 DJ and music producer Julio Bashmore.

Max's approach to teaching young musicians was to insist they create and produce their own music rather than simply cover the popular music of established acts, and Max took this approach of ‘following your passion and forging your own path’ into his academic work. Max was a unique individual, and I genuinely feel proud to have known and worked with him during his doctoral studies. He is remembered with great fondness by all who knew and worked or studied with him, and his sudden and premature death a big loss to the academic community.

A charitable organisation, Max Weedon Music (charity no. 1206950) has recently been set up by Max’s family in his memory to promote the work of young musicians [www.maxweedonmusic.org]. The charity will make modest awards to help disadvantaged young people in need of a financial helping hand to buy an instrument, or pay for studio time, some coaching, training in mastering and mixing and so on. The charity Trustees are currently working to establish its principles and operating procedures. It is planned to offer the first Awards in the autumn of 2024. Some of the proceeds from the sales of this book will go to support the charity and help continue the good work Max was so passionate about.

For further details please contact: info@maxweedonmusic.org

Richard

[Prof Richard Waller]

List of Tables and Figures

Tables
Table 4.1. Participant Data. 54
Table 5.1. Research Participants. 71
Table 9.1. Research Participants and Contextual Data. 146
Table 10.1. Extract From a Transcript. 161
Table 11.1. Final Focus Group Themes. 180
Table 13.1. Contextual Information About the Participants. 216
Table 15.1. Participants' Pseudonym Names, Abbreviations and Gender. 253
Table 15.2. Reading Calculation. 255

Figures
Fig. 3.1. Timeline of the Evolution of Advanced Practice Education and Drivers for Change. 32
Fig. 6.1. Example of Sociograph Graphic Representation of Small Group Interactions. 89
Fig. 6.2. Critical Learning Incident (CLI) Graph Showing When Learning, Categorised as Potential, Tangible or Elaborated, Was Evident During a Group Work Episode. 90
Fig. 9.1. Representation of Professional Identity Formation From a Teacher's Knowledge Perspective. 143
Fig. 10.1. Visual Mapping of Participant Journeys Through Four Phases of Research Mapped Using Formation of Professional Identity Consistency. 164
Fig. 10.2. Visual Mapping of Participant Journeys Through Four Phases of Research Mapped Using Coded Categories as Differences of Developing Identity. 166
Fig. 11.1. Research Map. 177
Fig. 14.1. The Critical Realist World Systems Theoretical Model (CReWS). 234
Fig. 15.1. Pupils' Pre- and Post-reading Assessment Data. 257

About the Editors

Richard Waller is Professor of Education and Social Justice at UWE Bristol. He has taught in further and higher education for nearly 30 years. Richard co-leads UWE's EdD Professional Doctorate in Education and Education PhD programmes. His own research interests cover education, inequality and identity/ies, and he has published widely on these topics.

Jane Andrews is Professor of Education at UWE Bristol. Her research interests focus on multilingualism and learning. Jane teaches on the undergraduate programmes BA (Hons) Early Childhood and BA (Hons) Education. Jane supervises doctoral students and jointly leads the UWE EdD programme. Jane’s current research explores integrating creative arts practices into learning and teaching.

Timothy Clark's research focuses on researcher development, including the role of doctoral pedagogy in supporting and influencing methodological decision-making. Following a career as a leader in early years education, he completed an EdD before joining UWE in 2019. He is currently the Director of Research and Enterprise for the School of Education and Childhood at UWE.

About the Contributors

Shamsudin Abikar is a Doctor of Education and for 19 years has been working in mainstream educational settings (primary and secondary) in Bristol in different roles. In 2012, he won the Primary Language Classroom Award for his contribution of how English is taught to primary pupils who learn it as an additional language (EAL learners). Shamsudin presented his research outcomes in and outside of the United Kingdom His research interests include languages and education, multilingualism, identity and learning. He has published many articles including Addressing English Reading Comprehension Difficulties by Somali Origin Pupils in England Primary Schools.

Jake Bacon is a Senior Lecturer in Education at UWE and is the digital lead for the BA Education programme. Jake worked in further education (FE) for 15 years firstly as a sports lecturer, and later as a teacher training coordinator. Jake's EdD, completed in 2017, was titled ‘FE Sports Lecturer Professionalism’: ‘Freedom to Play’, or ‘Do as I Say?’. Jake's research interests relate to teacher professionalism, working contexts of teachers and digital pedagogy. Outside of work Jake is a volunteer lifeboat Helm at Portishead RNLI, which he has been doing for the last 12 years.

Helen Bovill's research interests focus on identity, in particular non-traditional identity. Helen's recent research is situated in the field of relationships, sex and health education, and prevention and response to violence against women and girls. Helen has taught at UWE for nearly 20 years and currently teaches and supervises postgraduates.

Nicola Bowden-Clissold's primary research interest is in exploring young children's experiences in educational settings, adopting participatory action-based research methodologies. Being passionate about early childhood education, Nicola teaches and supervises in areas of early years, childhood, children's rights and voices and teacher and practitioner provision.

Ciaran Burke is an Associate Professor of Higher Education; his research focuses on social inequalities in higher education and the graduate labour market through a Bourdieusian theoretical lens. His recent work has focused on conceptualizing ‘resilience’ within a Sociological framework.

Juliet Edmonds' current research interests are engineering education in primary schools, using science literary materials with children, the development of expertise in science teaching and language in science. Her doctoral research explored the ways teachers develop their science teaching and identity in school. She has worked at UWE, educating teachers, for over 20 years. She started her career as a primary teacher in London schools and as an advisory teacher for science.

Georgie Ford has been a figure in the mental health and educational field for over 15 years. Georgie has worked within the NHS and acute settings before moving to education where she has lectured from GCSE to HE level and is a senior fellow of the HEA and SET. Georgie's doctoral research focuses on changing the narrative of mental health in FE. This was presented at the London International Conference of Education and is published in the International Journal for Cross Disciplinary Subjects in Education. Georgie writes for TES and developed an emotional recovery framework for education. Georgie is a Mental Health First Aid and Suicide First Aid instructor and has achieved the Gold Carnegie Award in mental health for her work.

Nicholas Garrick, as a teacher, school leader and consultant, is committed to exploring how people think about learning, teaching and research. As an EYFS and primary school teacher and leader for 23 years, he has led and supported a range of schools locally to organizations and governments in post-conflict and post-disaster countries. As a school leader and consultant, he enables others to seek solutions, and considers creativity, curiosity and enquiry as essential to both leading and learning. As a researcher, Grounded Theory and clean language drive everything he seeks to understand.

Andy Goldhawk's doctoral research explores perceptions of ongoing professional learning for mid-career lecturers in the further education (FE) sector in England. Previously an FE lecturer for 15 years, Andy now works in higher education. Andy's interest in professional learning has since led to the publication of his first book, ‘The Super Quick Guide to Learning Theories and Teaching Approaches’, by SAGE in May 2023. He has also published in the journal Research in Post-Compulsory Education.

Neil Harrison is an Associate Professor in Education and Social Justice in the School of Education at the University of Exeter. His research interests focus on educational inequalities and marginalization, with a particular theme around young people's decision-making. He enjoys supervising doctoral students across a range of topics, theories and methodologies.

Verity Jones has worked with organizations such as Friends of the Earth, Fashion Revolution, the BBC and Barnardo's to explore themes such as climate and sustainable education, anti-racism and impacts on mental health and wellbeing. Social and environmental justice is a consistent thread through Verity's research and educational practice.

Ben Knight is a Senior Lecturer in Education and former teacher and school leader. He lectures on Initial Teacher Education (ITE), postgraduate, masters and doctoral programmes at UWE, Bristol. His research interests include investigating teaching and learning from a complex systems perspective and applications of complexity theory to education, e.g. exploring ways learning emerges within classroom collectives. He also researches and writes about the importance and development of teacher judgement. Ben is Pedagogy Strand co-leader for UWE's Education & Childhood Research Group and founder and Director of Project Zulu, an international education partnership between UWE and school districts in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Ben's first book titled ‘Nurturing Professional Judgement’ published by Critical Publishing was published in October 2023.

Meg Maguire is a Professor of Sociology of Education in the School of Education, Communication and Society at King's College London. Her research is in the sociology of education, social justice and policy. Currently she is part of a team working on a five year project investigating how England's vocational education and training (VET) system can better support the school-to-work transitions of the 50% of young people who don't go to university.

Laura Manison's research is centred on class, gender and the perceived choices people make as a result. Her doctoral research explored choice in terms of young working and middle-class women becoming primary school teachers. She works on postgraduate courses in UWE's School of Education and Childhood looking chiefly at learning theory in HE. Before that Laura worked as a primary school teacher, school leader and then led the PGCE in Primary and Early Years Education at UWE. Laura's methodological interest is grounded in narrative inquiry and as her academic work has evolved she has embraced poetic representation and autoethnography to present her own and her participants’ narratives.

Kathy Mansfield Higgins is Max's mother. She started her career teaching geography in Botswana and subsequently worked in several African countries in various state-building and governance assignments. Max was born in Botswana and maintained a deep attachment to southern Africa. Kathy now writes short stories and teaches creative writing.

Alexandra Morfaki's research interests lie in the area of inclusion in the early years for children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities. Her doctoral thesis focused on early years educators' interpretation of inclusion in practice and explored interprofessional partnerships for inclusion and their influence on the formation of the role and identities of early years educators. Alexandra currently works as a Lecturer in early years at Norland College. She initially trained as a reception class teacher and worked in a range of early years settings in the capacity of teacher and manager prior to completing her Doctorate.

Sally Moyle's research interest is in the arena of professional identity, and supporting health practitioners move into new and expanding roles. A nurse by professional background, Sally worked as an Emergency Nurse Practitioner and has been in Higher Education for over 20 years developing new programmes and initiatives to support role expansion across all levels and more specifically Advanced Practice. She is currently the Pro Vice Chancellor for Health and Science at the University of Worcester.

Tessa Podpadec's research interests include teacher professionalism, educational environments, sustainable futures in education and using creative approaches as research method and pedagogical practice. Most recently she has worked on projects exploring climate change, fast fashion and sustainable education and impacts of racism on mental health and wellbeing.

Catherine Rosenberg's professional interests have included the varying development of students and academics. Her work in academic management and teaching is now focused at postgraduate level on a range of professional development programmes. She supervises postgraduate students on various pedagogical and methodological areas, particularly in relation to narrative inquiry.

Julie Smith's doctoral research investigates the beliefs and practices of high expectation teachers. Julie has taught in secondary schools for nearly 30 years and is currently the Vice-Principal at a school in Gloucestershire, with responsibility for teaching and learning. She has also written for various publications including the Times Educational Supplement, the BERA blog and the Chartered College of Teaching. Julie's educational philosophy is underpinned by a belief in social justice, and as such she is a passionate advocate for non-selective state education, and for the professional learning and development needs of teachers to advance a transformative vision of education.

Karan Vickers-Hulse's research interests focus on the impact of policy and identity. Karan's doctoral research explored the complexities of professional identity formation for trainees on a postgraduate teacher education programme. Karan is a teacher educator and researcher; although much of her work focuses on student teachers, she is passionate about supporting all educators to continue learning in a constantly shifting landscape of policy and practice in education. Karan started her career as a primary school teacher and worked in senior leadership roles in schools in England and Wales before moving to UWE Bristol in 2013. Karan is now the Associate Director of Education in the School of Education and Childhood.

Sarah Whitehouse's research interests are focused on the teaching of sensitive and controversial issues that teachers may face in the classroom. Her doctoral research considered how the history curriculum can cause tensions for teachers when they engage in topics that can be sensitive and or controversial. Sarah's recent research is situated in the field of anti-racist education and issues of social justice. Sarah started her career as a primary school teacher and has worked in higher education supporting trainee teachers for the last 13 years. She is an active and passionate member of the history and geography education community, locally, nationally and internationally.

Marcus Witt began teaching in South India and rural Kentucky before returning to the United Kingdom to complete his PGCE work in primary schools. He now works in initial teacher education. He has a long-standing interest in psychology; from the cognitive and emotional processes in mathematical learning to the role of personality in children's classroom interactions.

Max Weedon was a passionate and highly gifted teacher and academic. His main love was music in all genres, and he worked with young musicians in the United Kingdom, the Caribbean and Zimbabwe. Another passion was scuba diving, and he was Padi qualified Master Diver and Instructor. It was while diving in Barbados that he died in a car accident in early 2023. As a committed teacher in the United Kingdom, faced with implementing the Government's controversial Prevent policy, Max researched the societal and political motives behind the policy, and its effects on teachers' pedagogic and welfare responsibilities towards their students.

How to access the original doctoral studies

Any of the 14 theses upon which these chapters are based can be found in the UWE research repository using this address, and typing the author's name into the search box: https://www.uwe.ac.uk/study/library/browse-resources-a-z/theses

Acknowledgements

We are grateful for support from the University of the West of England's Faculty Research Investment Scheme to enable us to devote time to curating and developing this collaborative writing project to showcase the wonderful work of some of our recent postgraduate researchers, and to offer others the chance to benefit from their studies.

The collection would not have happened without the enthusiasm and hard work of our chapter authors, their co-authors and all those who have supported them during the writing process, so we want to put on record our thanks to them all. In particular, we would like to thank Kathy Mansfield Higgins, the mother of chapter author Max Weedon, who stepped in to lead the writing of that chapter by way of a tribute to him after his sudden tragic death in a car accident in the early stages of this project.

We are grateful to all of the participants and institutions who agreed to participate in the doctoral studies explored in this collection.

Throughout the development of this project and the writing process we have been fully sustained and supported by Professor Meg Maguire and we thank her wholeheartedly for this.

The anonymous reviewers of the proposal for this volume provided several valuable insights and suggestions to enhance the collection, for which we are grateful.

Finally, we want to thank Emerald Press, in particular Kim Chadwick initially and Kirsty Wood more recently who each saw the value in promoting a collection of co-authored early career researchers' postdoctoral writing. We hope to work with you again in the near future.

Richard, Jane and Timothy

Prelims
Chapter 1 Educational Policies and Professional Identities: Showcasing Lessons From Doctoral Practitioner Research
Section 1 Constructions of the Professional and Society
Chapter 2 Hierarchies of Professionalism in Interprofessional Partnerships for Inclusion: Mapping the Role and Professional Identities of Early Years Educators
Chapter 3 Professional Identity Within Changing Healthcare Roles: Exploring the Third or Hybrid Space
Chapter 4 The Impact of Symbolic Violence on the Perceived Choices of Trainee Primary School Teachers: A Poetic Perspective
Chapter 5 Further Education (FE) Sports Lecturer Professionalism: ‘Freedom to Play’, or ‘Do as I Say?’
Section 2 Interrogating Approaches to Becoming, Being and Developing as Education Professionals
Chapter 6 Teaching and Learning as Complex Phenomena: Implications for Policy and Teacher Professional Identity
Chapter 7 Mastering Professional Practices: Primary School Science Teacher Identity and Development
Chapter 8 Voices From the Staffroom: Impacts of Further Education Policy on CPD in the Sector
Chapter 9 Teacher Training in England: Exploring Trainee Teachers' Perspectives on Their Professional Identity Formation
Chapter 10 Convergence, Change, Consciousness and Confidence: The Impact of Initial Teacher Training Policy on Confident, Career Changing Practising Teachers
Section 3 Challenging Education Policy and Practice
Chapter 11 Changing the Narrative of Mental and Emotional Health Training in an FE Context: Explorations of Transformational Learning
Chapter 12 ‘It's Our Job to Take the Limits Away’: Exploring the Beliefs and Practices of High Expectation Teachers
Chapter 13 Context, Consciousness and Caution: Teachers of History in England and the Exploration of Sensitive and Controversial Issues in Practice
Chapter 14 Counter-Terrorism Measures in the Classroom: The Importance of Professionalism, Agency and Autonomy When Enacting the Prevent Duty
Chapter 15 Home Language Literacy Learning as an Extracurricular Activity by Pupils and Parents: Do the Findings Warrant a Case for Introducing Home Language Policy for Primary Education in England?
Chapter 16 Reviewing the Collection's Contribution and Value of Practice-Based Doctoral Studies
Index