Videnskabelig artikel 2021
Young pupils’ articulations of time spent in school in the wake of a policy reform
Udgivelsens forfattere:
- Mikkel Giver Kjer
- Tea Torbenfeldt Bengtsson
- Chantal Pohl Nielsen
Ledelse og implementering
Dagtilbud, skole og uddannelse
Ledelse og implementering, Dagtilbud, skole og uddannelse
Advancing the ‘temporal turn’ in the sociology of education, this article
explores how a strong national discourse on the length of the school
day influences pupils’ articulations of their temporal experiences. The
discourse of ‘the long school day’ emerged as part of a fierce debate on
the implications of a Danish school reform passed in 2014. We use a
discourse-analytical framework to examine focus group data from
pupils aged 8–12 to show how the discursive context of the reform
influences the pupils’ articulations of their temporal experiences. The
pupils’ reproduction of the adult discourse of ‘the long school day’ conceals a diversity in temporal experiences and reduces them to being a
concern about the number of clock hours spent in school. To understand the broader impact of pupils’ temporal experiences of their school
day, we need to rethink the linearity between clock hours and articulations of time.
explores how a strong national discourse on the length of the school
day influences pupils’ articulations of their temporal experiences. The
discourse of ‘the long school day’ emerged as part of a fierce debate on
the implications of a Danish school reform passed in 2014. We use a
discourse-analytical framework to examine focus group data from
pupils aged 8–12 to show how the discursive context of the reform
influences the pupils’ articulations of their temporal experiences. The
pupils’ reproduction of the adult discourse of ‘the long school day’ conceals a diversity in temporal experiences and reduces them to being a
concern about the number of clock hours spent in school. To understand the broader impact of pupils’ temporal experiences of their school
day, we need to rethink the linearity between clock hours and articulations of time.
Udgivelsens forfattere
Om denne udgivelse
Publiceret i
British Journal of Sociology of Education