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Blog Special Issues

Unpacking the complexities and challenges of education in Northern Ireland

Stimulating debate with Ulster University’s Transforming Education project

The rationale for how education operates is often contentious. There are varying views about academic selection, politicians disparage some degrees while lauding others, private schools’ charitable status is disputed … and so on. However, in Northern Ireland, schooling largely replicates profound British/Protestant and Irish/Catholic societal divisions.

Some researchers/teacher educators choose to avoid researching the divisions in the system – it may be considered much safer for career advancement to look at literacy, school retention, academic outcomes, and so on. However, a small team of researchers at Ulster University decided to step outside their comfort zone and write a series of ‘Transforming Education’ papers to stimulate debate on aspects of the Northern Ireland education context. While using a rigorous academic approach, these briefing papers were designed to be short and accessible. The researchers used them to explore (and expose on social and traditional media platforms) some of the little-understood and frequently overlooked issues that lie at the foundations of a system in need of a fundamental overhaul. The eight blog posts in this special issue are based on these discussion papers.

The focus of this special issue is not to advance any partisan view but to unpack the complexities of Northern Ireland’s education context in order to promote debate among parents and prospective parents, politicians and decision-makers, among the wider public and within the profession itself.

The contributions explore:

  • the rationale for Ulster University’s Transforming Education project and what it set out to do
  • the strengths, while also naming the ‘dark’ secrets, of ‘learning apart’ in the Northern Ireland education landscape
  • some of the challenges of duplication within Northern Ireland’s education system
  • the complex role that religion plays in Northern Ireland’s schooling system
  • the impacts of academic selection
  • whether Citizenship Education in Northern Ireland has lived up to its vision
  • an opinion piece applauding Integrated schools as a small step along the road to unity
  • reimagining an education system in Northern Ireland; one which reconsiders governance, the role of churches, academic selection and Citizenship Education.

Editors

Profile picture of Stephen Roulston
Stephen Roulston, Dr

Honorary research fellow at Ulster University

Dr Stephen Roulston is an honorary research fellow in the School of Education at Ulster University, formerly a lecturer in initial teacher education. A teacher of Geography and Geology for many years, he joined Ulster University in 2009. While...

Profile picture of Barbara Skinner
Barbara Skinner, Professor

Professor in TESOL and Education at Ulster University

Barbara Skinner is a Professor in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages)and Education in the School of Education at Ulster University. Barbara lectures on a range of teacher education courses. She is involved with doctoral...

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