The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

Original Article

Knowledge, education and research: Making common cause across communities of practice

Gemma Moss

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: g.moss@ioe.ac.uk

University of Bristol, , UK

Helen Woodhouse Building, Graduate School of Education, University of Bristol, 35 Berkeley Square, Clifton, BS8 1JA, United Kingdom, Tel: +44 (0)117 3314438. E‐mail:

g.moss@ioe.ac.uk

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 20 October 2016
Cited by: 1

Abstract

This article considers how knowledge, education and research interact as the institutional structures that support them change. Many efforts at large‐scale education reform depend upon the proposition that what counts as useful knowledge can be easily defined, without reference to the specific contexts in which that knowledge will be set to work. Yet ?useful knowledge’ as it appears to policymakers does not always translate into ?useful knowledge’ from the perspective of practitioners. Distance and context matter. Based on studies of the development of literacy policy in England under successive governments, the paper assesses the dislocations and divisions of labour that characterise the contemporary knowledge landscape and asks how the research community can continue to act for the common good in an increasingly crowded and contested education field.

Number of times cited: 1

  • , Reading for pleasure: whose job is it to build lifelong readers in the classroom?, Literacy, 52, 2, (95-102), (2018).