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The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation
The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation
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The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation
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The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation
The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation
Journal Article

The demise of school-developed elective courses in NSW: a case study in centralisation

2024
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Overview
PurposeIn January 2021, the state government of NSW, Australia, announced that all year 9 and 10 elective courses developed by schools will be phased out. This paper offers a brief historical account of school-developed board-endorsed courses (SDBECs) in NSW and a close analysis of the policy to phase them out.Design/methodology/approachI give an historical account of the meaning and place of SDBECs within the NSW school system, before situating the policy decision to phase them out within the broader historical and political context of curriculum reform in NSW. Finally, I offer an analysis of the discourses and framing of the policy both across curriculum review reports and in the government and public rhetoric, by examining policy documents, government media releases, news and blog articles at the time of the policy change.FindingsThis policy change and surrounding discourses are contextualised and analysed to show how the curriculum came to be blamed for a host of educational problems, and how the government arrived at their irrational yet politically expedient policy response by distorting the meaning of one metaphor: the crowded curriculum. I conclude with a reading of the policy as indicative of centralisation and de-legitimisation of teachers’ curriculum development work.Originality/valueThe convergence of state and federal discourse about curriculum as a site of cleaning up, reforming or re-organising should concern educators in Australia especially as authority over education is increasingly centralised and made vulnerable to political whim. Close studies of such minor policy decisions provide a window into how larger processes of centralisation are justified and enacted at the local level.