Current Issue

Volume 4 Issue 3 | Läxhjälp as Shadow Education in Sweden: The Logic of Equality in “A School for All”

time:2021-11-11click:29设置

View & Download Full Text

Läxhjälp as Shadow Education in Sweden: The Logic of Equality in “A School for All” - Eva Forsberg, Stina Hallsén, Marie Karlsson, Helen Melander Bowden, Tatiana Mikhaylova, Johanna Svahn, 2021 (sagepub.com)


Article Information

Article first published online: December 23, 2020; Issue published: September 1, 2021 

Received: December 16, 2019; Accepted: August 23, 2020


Author

Eva Forsberg 

Uppsala University 

Stina Hallsén 

Uppsala University 

Marie Karlsson 

Uppsala University 

Helen Melander Bowden 

Uppsala University 

Tatiana Mikhaylova 

Uppsala University and University of Gävle 

Johanna Svahn 

Uppsala University


Abstract

Purpose: Taking läxhjälp/homework support in Sweden as a case, this article aims to further explore shadow education, especially as a pedagogical object from curriculum theory perspective.

Design/Approach/Methods: Approaches including policy analyses, ethnomethodological work based on video-recorded interaction, and narratives have produced empirically grounded knowledge. We use examples from several substudies and analyze the reentry and regulation of supplementary education and how tutors and tutees interact in tutoring settings and negotiate identities in läxhjälp as well as the relation to regular schooling.

Findings: Läxhjälp is conditioned by the logic of equality and changes in the governance of läxhjälp. The proliferation of different kinds of tutoring practices provided by various organizations calls for a broad definition of shadow education. With curriculum as boundary object, equality and academic success are foundational. Different settings and spatiotemporal arrangements affect modes of interaction, distribution of epistemic authority, and negotiations of identities.

Originality/Value: With Sweden as a case, it is possible to explore shadow education in a new context, the Scandinavian welfare state, and its history of comprehensive education. Moreover, ethnomethodological interaction and narrative studies and curriculum perspectives are seldom employed within research on shadow education. A number of critical key boundary objects are identified.


Keywords 

Boundary object, curriculum theory, homework support, identities, interaction, shadow education

返回原图
/