@article{a547761c0b9947a5a348b26a6e19b575,
title = "The problem of educational choice in senior secondary education: the ACT as a case study",
abstract = "How students select subjects and pathways in senior secondary education and beyond has long been regarded as a significant social justice issue as a result of contention regarding the value of more or less academic and vocational options. This paper examines these issues through a discussion of the notion of educational choice and the history of senior secondary reform in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), an educational system established in the 1970s with the express purpose of enhancing educational equity through supporting student choice and flexibility through school-based curriculum and assessment. The paper highlights the complexity of questions subsumed under the umbrella of educational choice, which encompass not only the reproduction of inequality but also student agency and self-making and intersect with debates about equity and curriculum form. It shows how the intent of the ACT system to ensure equally valued subject choices in schooling has since its inception existed in constant tension with a parallel emphasis on university pathways and that the system has over time evolved from one dedicated to the idea of curriculum diversity and responding to individual and community needs to one in which centralisation and standardisation are beginning to take precedence. This history raises important questions about the equity implications of centralising and decentralising curriculum forms and what they enable and constrain in shaping young people{\textquoteright}s futures.",
keywords = "Australian Capital Territory, Curriculum history, Educational choice, Senior secondary education",
author = "Kate O'Connor and Philip ROBERTS and Emma Filer and Kristofer Feodoroff",
note = "Funding Information: Research for this article was supported by funding from the ACT ED-UC (Education Directorate/University of Canberra) Affiliated Schools Research Program and the La Trobe ABC Internal Investment Scheme and with ethics approval from the University of Canberra (Human Ethics Approval Number 20170077). Funding Information: In this paper, we consider the challenges of creating equally valued pathways through a discussion of the notion of choice in education and the history of senior secondary reform in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). Our analysis draws from a larger research project funded by the University of Canberra and the ACT Government which aims to understand the relationships between students\u2019 demographic characteristics and access and achievement in the ACT Senior Secondary Curriculum. The wider project includes three elements: (1) statistical analysis of student level data at all ACT schools in collaboration with the ACT Education Directorate and the ACT Board of Senior Secondary Studies (BSSS); (2) interviews, focus groups and surveys with students, parents and teachers at two ACT Colleges with different academic profiles; and (3) an examination of the development of the ACT senior secondary curriculum over time based on documentary records, interviews with key people involved and previous oral history interviews. In this article, we focus on our analysis of key documentary records held in the BSSS archives. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1007/s41297-024-00289-0",
language = "English",
pages = "1--13",
journal = "Curriculum Perspectives",
issn = "0159-7868",
publisher = "Australian Curriculum Studies Association Inc.",
}