Beyond subjects and skills or crossing the divide? From additionality to complementarity in college enrichment

This paper reports a longitudinal study, organized around national surveys and institution-based case studies, of 'enrichment' in post-16 colleges across England and Wales. These institutions transect general and vocational education pathways, whose curricula are organized respectively aro...

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Published inJournal of curriculum studies Vol. 57; no. 2; pp. 133 - 149
Main Authors Esmond, Bill, Kaur, Balwant, Atkins, Liz
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Routledge 04.03.2025
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Subjects
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ISSN0022-0272
1366-5839
DOI10.1080/00220272.2024.2425629

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Summary:This paper reports a longitudinal study, organized around national surveys and institution-based case studies, of 'enrichment' in post-16 colleges across England and Wales. These institutions transect general and vocational education pathways, whose curricula are organized respectively around subject disciplines and employment skills. Drawing on social justice perspectives and understandings of curriculum theory and cultural reproduction, the study initially analysed enrichment practices positioned as additional to subject-based curricula. However, extending thematic analysis through cross-case comparison, the study uncovered an additional, complementary role of enrichment: in some specialist/general education settings, teacher-led, practice-based extensions of subject curricula, complemented by agentic networking opportunities, facilitated middle-class higher education transitions; vocational enrichment, responding instead to 'learner support' imperatives and socializing young people into employment routines, sustained the normative transitions to work that characterize vocational pathways. These distinctive complementary logics mirror the inequalities of epistemic access identified by curriculum theory, suggesting that these extend beyond formal curricula. On the other hand, some marginal practices, including broader, more critical preparation for adulthood and work, suggest possibilities to advance social justice, transgressing the academic/vocational divide. Whilst unequal societies persistently sustain this divide, activities outside formal curricula may support more agentic and socially just transitions to adulthood and working life.
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ISSN:0022-0272
1366-5839
DOI:10.1080/00220272.2024.2425629