Walsh, Thomas and McDaid, Rory
(2016)
Excavating the Foundations of a Homogenous Primary School Teaching Force in Ireland.
In: ECER Annual Conference, 25th August 2016, UCD.
Abstract
The school teaching workforce in Ireland has been characterised as White, Heterosexual, Irish-born, Settled and Catholic or
WHISCS (Tracy, 2000 cited in Bryan, 2010. See also Clarke, 2009; Coolahan, 2003; Devine, 2005; Heinz, 2011; Hyland, 2012;
Schmidt and Mc Daid, 2015). Data on those entering undergraduate and post-graduate initial teacher education programmes
in Ireland (Keane & Heinz, 2015) and those seeking to enter the profession from abroad (Schmidt & Mc Daid, 2015; Mc Daid
& Walsh, forthcoming) provide little evidence that this situation will change in the immediate future. This situation is not
unique. Nevertheless, while it is accurate to claim that homogeneity is relatively consistent internationally (see Cochran-
Smith, 2004), there exist a particular set of historical underpinnings to the development and maintenance of this
phenomenon in the Irish context.
Commencing with a brief overview of emerging qualitative and quantitative data establishing a stubborn homogeneity within
the primary teaching workforce in Ireland, and further work which situates the Irish context within the wider European
experience, this paper moves quickly to explain how the two most entrenched controlling factors maintaining this situation,
religion and language, have deep historical trajectories. Drawing on critical documentary analysis, situated within a Critical
Race Theory (CRT) framework, the authors argue that even since before the establishment of the national system of
education in 1831, power brokers at various points in Irish history (e.g., British government, Irish government and various
church authorities) have worked hard to control inclusion and exclusion from the primary teaching workforce. Through an indepth
interrogation of legislation, state policy documents and ecclesiastical publications, the paper excavates very clear
antecedents of, at various times, government and church authorities exercising strict regulatory authority over those to be
imbued with the right to perform the highly moral act of reproduction of Irish society.
In the context of an international landscape within which calls for a more heterogeneous primary workforce gain traction
(see, for example, Schmidt & Block, 2010), this work has particular importance. Certain analyses (see, for example, Santoro,
2015; Keane & Heinz, 2015) emphasise paying attention to the complexities of teacher identity within the context of this
broader push for diversification. This paper seeks to add another lay of understanding to this debate through unearthing
pertinent historical technologies which secure the status quo.
Item Type: |
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
|
Keywords: |
primary school; teacher; teachers; education; teaching force; |
Academic Unit: |
Faculty of Social Sciences > Education |
Item ID: |
9692 |
Depositing User: |
Thomas Walsh
|
Date Deposited: |
18 Jul 2018 16:04 |
Refereed: |
Yes |
URI: |
|
Use Licence: |
This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available
here |
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