The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting
Home-school relations, home learning and parental engagement are prominent educational policy issues, constituting one aspect of a wider parenting support agenda that has suffused the landscape of social policy over the last two decades. This article examines a parenting support initiative distincti...
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/2/37 |
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doaj-6c684962dc944d5581e4210f954699f12020-11-25T02:05:33ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782020-03-014373710.3390/genealogy4020037The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of ParentingNathan Fretwell0Department of Education, Middlesex University, London NW4 4BT, UKHome-school relations, home learning and parental engagement are prominent educational policy issues, constituting one aspect of a wider parenting support agenda that has suffused the landscape of social policy over the last two decades. This article examines a parenting support initiative distinctive for its use of link workers in mobilising ‘hard to reach’ parents to engage more effectively with their children’s education. Drawing on qualitative data gathered during the evaluation of the initiative, the article frames link worker–parent interactions as a form of everyday government and pastoral power. Link workers constitute a new educational pastorate; through friendship, care and control they exercise pastoral power over parents. Building on recent research into the role of ‘pastors’ in producing neoliberal subjectivities within the National Health Service, the article foregrounds their efforts to foster responsible, self-disciplined agency in parents. Link workers, it is argued, contribute to a responsibilisation and pedagogicalisation of the family, which has produced new figures of mothering/parenting, reconfigured the meaning of the home and extended the scope of state intervention into family life.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/2/37link workersparental engagementpastoral powergovernmentalityFoucaultpedagogicalisation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Nathan Fretwell |
spellingShingle |
Nathan Fretwell The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting Genealogy link workers parental engagement pastoral power governmentality Foucault pedagogicalisation |
author_facet |
Nathan Fretwell |
author_sort |
Nathan Fretwell |
title |
The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting |
title_short |
The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting |
title_full |
The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting |
title_fullStr |
The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting |
title_full_unstemmed |
The New Educational Pastorate: Link Workers, Pastoral Power and the Pedagogicalisation of Parenting |
title_sort |
new educational pastorate: link workers, pastoral power and the pedagogicalisation of parenting |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Genealogy |
issn |
2313-5778 |
publishDate |
2020-03-01 |
description |
Home-school relations, home learning and parental engagement are prominent educational policy issues, constituting one aspect of a wider parenting support agenda that has suffused the landscape of social policy over the last two decades. This article examines a parenting support initiative distinctive for its use of link workers in mobilising ‘hard to reach’ parents to engage more effectively with their children’s education. Drawing on qualitative data gathered during the evaluation of the initiative, the article frames link worker–parent interactions as a form of everyday government and pastoral power. Link workers constitute a new educational pastorate; through friendship, care and control they exercise pastoral power over parents. Building on recent research into the role of ‘pastors’ in producing neoliberal subjectivities within the National Health Service, the article foregrounds their efforts to foster responsible, self-disciplined agency in parents. Link workers, it is argued, contribute to a responsibilisation and pedagogicalisation of the family, which has produced new figures of mothering/parenting, reconfigured the meaning of the home and extended the scope of state intervention into family life. |
topic |
link workers parental engagement pastoral power governmentality Foucault pedagogicalisation |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/2/37 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT nathanfretwell theneweducationalpastoratelinkworkerspastoralpowerandthepedagogicalisationofparenting AT nathanfretwell neweducationalpastoratelinkworkerspastoralpowerandthepedagogicalisationofparenting |
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