“Taking off the shackles”: the joy, freedom and gravitational pull of low-stakes curriculum innovation within a high-stakes assessment framework

Jennifer Hennessy, Bruna Nogueira

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    High-stakes assessments continue to command a directing influence on education systems globally. While there is much research detailing the challenges associated with this curricular framework, there is little evidence of a move away from high-stakes assessment frameworks to date. Accordingly, attention is being drawn to spaces and opportunities where meaningful teaching and learning experiences may be fostered within high-stakes systems. This paper explores the case of the Transition Year Programme in Ireland through the lens of the poetry classroom as a case study of striking counter-cultural curriculum innovation set within a high-stakes assessment educational framework. Drawing on the perspectives of poetry teachers, the findings of the study highlight the joy, freedom and gravitational pull experienced by practitioners teaching on this programme. Curriculum and policy-based considerations supporting both the integration of counter-cultural educational innovations across high-stakes educational systems and within high-stakes educational programmes are advanced arising from the findings of this study.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalEducational Review
    DOIs
    Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

    Keywords

    • curriculum innovation
    • English teaching
    • high-stakes assessment
    • low-stakes assessment
    • poetry pedagogy
    • Transition year

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