Abstract
Abstract: Drawing on data from a project exploring children's and adults’ friendships across social class and ethnic difference, this paper focuses on the enactment of national and institutional policy around children’s friendships as realized in three primary schools in diverse urban areas in London. Through a focus on the way in which social and emotional learning (SEL) and teachers’ understandings of children’s friendships seek to govern children’s friendship behaviours, we turn to Foucault’s work to explore how power shapes relations between policy frameworks and teachers’ practices, and between those who teach and those who are taught. We discuss the disciplinary potential of SEL and teachers’ ‘common sense’ understandings of children’s friendships, but conclude by noting possibilities for teachers to create spaces in which all children can safely explore the nature of friendships.
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Vincent, C., Neal, S., & Iqbal, H. (2016). Children’s friendships in diverse primary schools: teachers and the processes of policy enactment. Journal of Education Policy, 31(4), 482–494. https://doi.org/10.1080/02680939.2015.1130859
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