Institutional language policing and the maintenance of race-class inequalities

FORUM - ISSN 0963-8253
Volume 65 Number 3 (2023)

Institutional language policing and the maintenance of race-class inequalities
Julia Snell, Ian Cushing pages 128-141
DOI: 10.3898/forum.2023.65.3.19

Abstract

In this article, we show how Ofsted operates as institutional language police, and how the inspectorate’s attitudes about language maintain race-class inequalities under a guise of social justice, equality and evidence-based practice. Our research has repeatedly demonstrated how Ofsted reproduces long-standing, deficit-based and colonial logics that marginalised children lack adequate language, and that school is a place where they can be compensated for these supposed shortcomings. We outline three key areas of this work. First, we trace the kind of research about language that Ofsted draws on to build the so-called evidence-base which underpins its contemporary policies. Second, we reveal the language ideologies that circulate in school inspection reports and how the inspectorate evaluates the language of teachers and pupils. Finally, we show how these stances on language have direct impact on the lives of teachers and children in schools. We argue that the extent of the language policing and discrimination we have uncovered in Ofsted’s policies and reporting demonstrates that these are not simply individual mistakes but an institutionalised, systemic and normalised feature of the inspectorate’s practice. 

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To cite this article
Julia Snell, Ian Cushing (2023) Institutional language policing and the maintenance of race-class inequalities, FORUM, 65(3), 128-141. https://doi.org/10.3898/forum.2023.65.3.19

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