This book offers an important and timely critique of expertise, showing how it is a 'keyword' shaped by social, historical, and political debates about what counts as knowledge and truth, and who counts as experts. Using teacher expertise as an illustrative case, Jessica Gerrard and Jessica Holloway reflect on recent events, including COVID-19 and the climate crisis, to examine how expertise is never neutral, objective, or fixed. They argue that 'getting political' is not just an inevitable part of teacher expertise, but a necessary basis of any claim to it.
Across the chapters, Expertise explores how expertise is socially constructed in relation to governance, uses of data and evidence, understandings of ignorance and the unknown, and - ultimately - power. Using contemporary and historical examples from international contexts, the authors address the political positioning of expertise and how this creates boundaries between who is an expert and who is not, and what is (and is not) expertise. Gerrard and Holloway argue that ongoing policy debates about teacher expertise cannot be resolved by neutral definitions of 'good teaching'. Rather, expertise is unavoidably political in its expression.
Expertise
Jessica Gerrard and Jessica Holloway
A critical account of teacher expertise, attending to its socially and politically contextualised relationship to governance and power through an examination of recent international research.Rights sold
All rights availableBook Details
Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication Date: 23-02-2023
Format: Hardback | 198 x 129mm | 128 pagesAbout the Authors
Jessica Gerrard is Associate Professor in the Melbourne Graduate School of Education at University of Melbourne, Australia.
Jessica Holloway is Senior Research and ARC DECRA (2019-2022) Fellow in the Institute for Learning Sciences and Teacher Education at Australian Catholic University, Australia.
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