Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/20677
Title: Power, policing and language policy mechanisms in schools: a response to Hudson
Authors: Cushing, I
Keywords: language education policy;language ideologies;critical applied linguistics;schools;England
Issue Date: 24-Jun-2020
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Citation: Cushing, I. (2020) 'Power, policing and language policy mechanisms in schools: a response to Hudson', Language in Society, 49 (3), pp. 461-475. doi: 10.1017/S004740452000038X.
Abstract: © The Author(s) 2020. This discussion is a response to Richard Hudson's response to my article, ‘The policy and policing of language in schools’ (Cushing 2019). Hudson argues that current education policy in England generally rejects and avoids prescriptivism and sets out to illustrate this in reference to a number of policy documents. As in my original article, I conceive of language policy as p/Political and one way in which language ideologies get turned into practices, through a series of policy mechanisms such as curricula, tests, and guidance for teachers. I show how these mechanisms do not ‘reject’ prescriptivism, but explicitly perpetuate it, and thus act as a system of coercion which can lead teachers into reproducing these ideologies in their practice. I argue that Hudson's argument is limited because of its depoliticised stance and understanding of key sociolinguistic concepts and issues, such as ‘Standard English’, ‘linguistic correctness’, and language education itself. (Language education policy, language ideologies, critical applied linguistics, schools, England).
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/20677
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S004740452000038X
ISSN: 0047-4045
Appears in Collections:Dept of Education Research Papers

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