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L I T E R A C Y  &  N U M E R A C Y  S T U D I E S  Vol 18 No 2 2010 26 
 

Is the Professionalisation of Adult Basic Skills 
Practice Possible, Desirable or Inevitable?   
 

CAROL DENNIS  
 

 

  
 

A b s t r a c t   

This paper explores the meaning and implications of a policy-driven 
professionalisation of adult basic skills practice. Written amidst competing 
theoretical conceptualisations of professionalism, the paper focuses on a 
particular policy moment in Adult Language, Literacy and Numeracy 
(ALLN) practice in England:  Skills for Life. The paper argues that the 
possibility of implementation of this policy is limited. The policy is filtered 
through the fragmented nature of the field, the embeddedness of literacy and 
what this paper calls an 'anti-professional' stance of ALLN practice. For policy 
makers, professionalisation is desirable, and its impact is far-reaching. It 
enables control of a key aspect of the service sector implicated in the supply 
of flexi-workers required by a globalised economy. In discussing the 
inevitability of professionalisation the paper draws on a small-scale research 
project to locate a space for the professional imagination, a space in which 
ALLN practitioners express motivations at odds with policy imperatives and 
enact professionalisation in ways that arguably hijack the momentum and 
resource that the policy provides.  

I n t r o d u c t i o n  

In this paper I interrogate the possibility, desirability and inevitability of 
professionalising adult basic skills practice.  

The discussion is written amidst an almost meteoric rise in the last 30 
years of theoretical conceptualisations of what it means to be a professional 
(Harper and Jephcote 2010, Shore and Zannettino 2002). The temporary 
settlement of classical sociology, which defined professionalism in terms of 
fixed traits and social functions, has given way to critical onslaught. In 
contemporary discourse, professionalism is in a state of crisis (Elliott 1996, 
Robson 1998, Frost 2001, Gleeson and James 2007), a crisis precipitated by a 
particular policy climate in which issues of trust, authority, moral integrity and 
expertise – once embodied by the professional – have become disaggregated 
(Morley 2003:5)  or dissolved (Sardar 2000).  

In this shifting and diverse terrain, I frame the professional as ‘an 
uncertain being with disparate allegiances’, but more significantly as an 
‘implementer of government policy’ (Stronach 2002:109).  In doing so I 
explore a particular moment in the development of adult basic skills  - or to 



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use its more contemporary name – Adult Language, Literacy and Numeracy 
(ALLN) in England when what had been a loosely bound and informal 
occupational space was shunted towards a controlled, defined and closely 
monitored profession. 

I focus on ALLN – with an emphasis on adult literacy. But the 
discussion is situated within and reverberates across other territories. ALLN 
is part of the UK’s Learning and Skills Sector – LSS – and so included in the 
policy wave that has engulfed this area. The experience of LSS connects to 
other occupational groups, health, welfare and schooling, which have all been 
reconfigured in similar policy driven ways (Clarke and Newman 2005). The 
UK experience connects to trends across the English speaking centres of 
economic power which have all, with divergent formulations, translations and 
transformations responded to the ‘globalisation of risk’ with a form of policy 
hyperactivity (Edwards and Usher 2008).   

S k i l l s  f o r  L i f e  

In 2000 the UK government, New Labour, developed Skills for Life, a 
policy that connected poor levels of language, literacy and numeracy 
achievement among adults living in England to the absence of a ‘coherent and 
consistent set of national standards to guarantee the quality of what was being 
taught [to adults attending basic skills classes], how it was taught and the 
qualifications […] awarded to learners’ (DfEE 1999:para 1.9). The Skills for 
Life strategy (DfEE 1999) included: 

• Greater participation in ALLN 
• Nationally defined core-curricular documents 
• Subject specialisms of Adult Literacy, Adult Numeracy and English 

for Speakers of other Languages  
• Teaching and learning materials to accompany the core-curricular 

documents 
• Qualifications for teachers 
• Qualifications for learners  
• Instituted and devolved national targets for learners’ qualifications 
• A ring-fenced 40% funding uplift making ALLN a lucrative curricular 

proposition 
• A new and formalised approach to recording learners’ progress  
• The establishment of an evidence base to inform practice  

It is difficult to overestimate the impact these changes have had. What 
appears as a neat list is actually a pervasive infrastructure requiring a great 
deal of local activity.  This is what I frame as a policy driven attempt to 
professionalise ALLN practice. It is worth pointing out that, in this shifting 
and diverse theorisation, processes I here associate with professionalisation 



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have elsewhere been characterised as deprofessionalisation (Randle and 
Brady 1997) or alternatively reprofessionalisation  (Avis, Bathmaker and 
Parsons 2002) as well as a simultaneous process of both deprofessionalisation 
and reprofessionalisation (Shain 1999). I have also favoured the term 
professionalisation – a verb and therefore something active (Harper and 
Jephcote 2010:5) to place greater emphasis on a fluid, orchestrated process of 
negotiation and change. Other social theorists have more often used the term 
professionalism – a noun and by implication something that is or may 
become static.  

The paper draws on theoretical and empirical work to explore the 
professionalisation of ALLN. In the final section I incorporate interview data 
of a small scale research project ‘Controlling the Imagination’ conducted over 
two years between 2007 and 2009 into the different meanings embedded in 
the notion of quality when applied to ALLN. While professionalisation was 
not the focus for this study, what it meant to implement Skills for Life was an 
ever present concern. The data therefore allows a glimpse of a key aspect of 
professionalisation.  

T h e  p r o f e s s i o n a l i s a t i o n  o f  A L L N :  i s  i t  p o s s i b l e ?    

In exploring the possibility of professionalisation, I explore the 
disparate nature of the occupational field that falls within the boundary of 
ALLN. It is the porous fluctuating nature of ALLN provision that conspires 
against the idea of ALLN practice as professionalised. I then explore strands 
within ALLN work that are distinctly anti-professional. By invoking anti-
professionalism, it is not my intention to draw on ‘discourses of derision’ 
(Ball 1990) or argue that professionalism amounts to a ‘conspiracy against the 
laity’. I rather suggest that the hallmarks of ALLN practice are antithetical to 
the distancing and privilege associated with professionalism, shards of 
meaning that echo its classical conceptualisation.  

L i t e r a c y  a n d  C o n t e x t  

In defining and defending a moral purpose for adult education, 
Wilson (2001) equates its inability to attain professional status to the nature of 
the field. The LSS in the UK is vast. It incorporates all post-compulsory 
education provision: general further education (FE) colleges, sixth forms 
(when these are not part of a school), work based learning, community and 
voluntary organisations, prisons, local authority funded adult education as 
well as private training organisations. In 2009 FE colleges employed 260,000 
staff in various teaching related roles. There are some 20,000 ALLN 
teachers, an estimated 50% of whom are employed on a part-time basis 
(LLUK 2010). As part-time staff they typically exist on the ‘slippery edges’ 
(Jameson and Hillier 2008) of organisations. Often working in isolated 
peripheral centres, they are a ‘casualised’ workforce who work in conditions 



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that make it difficult for them to form and maintain close working contacts 
with colleagues and managers. In these diverse contexts practitioners, 
teachers, lecturers, tutors, assessors, section leaders or advanced practitioners 
(the associated nomenclature indicates the porous nature of the role) out of 
necessity, develop localised ways of working.   

Professionalisation is strongly determined by local learning culture 
(James and Biesta 2007). What it means to be a professional does not easily 
translate from one context to another. Working with a group of homeless 
adults in a large city may require a very different approach to working with  
primary school parents attending a family literacy class, which may be very 
different to offering study skills support for students working towards a 
National Vocational Qualification (NVQ) in construction. Policy may define 
good practice, but its implementation requires quite considerable degrees of 
reworking  (Coffield and Edward 2009). Practice is constantly recrafted and 
recreated to suit the changing context. It is this process of engagement, the 
enactment of policy and professionalisation that creates its multiple but fractal 
possibilities.  Practitioners out of necessity adopt a dynamic approach to 
teaching literacy in response to learners lives (Castleton 2001). The depth of 
activity required is echoed in several studies of localised literacy practice 
(Crowther, Hamilton and Tett 2001), and the work of the National Research 
and Development Centre (Ivanic et al 2006) enlivens the decisive importance 
that context plays in this renegotiation. It is possible that this idea of context, 
and the extent to which it shapes practice, is a re-articulation of the mutually 
constitutive nature of the world as constructed by the individual, and the 
individual as shaped by the world. It implies a discussion about the 
relationship between policy - structure and professionalisation - agency.   To 
emphasise the locality of learning, and the occupational requirements that 
facilitate it, Haggis (2009:58) offers a version of socio-cultural theories of 
learning that position cognition as ‘far more situated than theories of situated 
learning imply’.  

This fragmentation does not preclude the possibility of any sense of 
common ground. Skills for Life is after all monolithic policy.  Its defining 
features, targets, qualification curriculum documents, inspection, while 
mediated by a local context, echo in each place they appear. A part-time 
practitioner may work in several different main and peripheral centres at any 
one time. There is fluidity and movement within and between the sectors. 
Practitioners coalesce around these common themes in how they experience 
the new infrastructure (Coffield et al 2008). However, even when 
practitioners travel from one centre to another, the ways in which they 
perform their role changes considerably to suit their context.  Prescriptions of 
what counts as appropriate practice precludes the possibility of enactment of 



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any monolithic policy. The one-size-fits-all policy provides a backdrop, but 
practitioners - reshape their stance as required. As practitioners move 
between the centres in the peripheries and the main centre, key relationships 
between students, and between teaching and non-teaching colleagues assume 
an unexpected fluidity (Crossan and Gallacher 2009).  

In part (though not wholly) this connects to a longstanding and abiding 
discussion within ALLN practice – namely the distinction made between 
literacy as skills and literacy as social practice, in as much as a social practices 
approach to literacy insists on the primacy of context as implicit in what it 
means to be literate. Once these different conceptualisations of literacy are 
connected to professionalisation they bring into sharp relief strands within 
ALLN practice that are distinctly anti-professional.  

A n t i - p r o f e s s i o n a l i s m  

I link these anti-professionalisation discourses to the influential work of 
Freire (1970) who emphasised teaching as part of a process of 
‘conscientisation’: critical thinking that linked pedagogy to developing a wider 
understanding of the conditions in which adult literacy learners find 
themselves. Freire advocated a situated approach to understanding literacy, 
an approach at odds with the autonomous model of literacy that pervades 
policy constructions but one that has been elaborated upon by the New 
Literacy Studies (Barton 2007b, 2007a, Crowther et al 2001). According to 
Freire authentic literacy is not limited to simply getting what the text says, but 
entwines reading the word and the world. Illiteracy is best understood as an 
injustice rather than a personal failure. Teaching literacy is an inherently 
political activity that involves dialogue, mutuality and exchange. Literacy can 
only be understood when it is placed in a context. It is relational and 
thoroughly embedded in social and communicative practices. The interest of 
New Literacy Studies is therefore on literacies rather than a single literacy, to 
reflect the different literacy practices of an individual negotiating situtations in 
different contexts, and the different literacy practices that are used to 
negotiate similar situations by different cultural and social groups. 

I describe the Freirean discourses as anti-professional because they are 
at odds with the professionalisation inscribed in Skills for Life. From a 
literacies perspective the literacy learners’ preferred approaches to managing 
the various texts that are part of their lives emerge from the particularity of 
the situation in which they are placed: their context of use. Literacy teaching, 
to be effective, has to be responsive (Barton 2007b). Literacy learning is here 
constructed as a rhizome. It precludes the imposition of hierarchies, 
structures and uniformity and consists of entanglements and contingent  
dis /connections.  This is somewhat at odds with the rigid hierarchical 
construction of literacy inscribed in the professionalisation of ALLN practice.  



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Tusting (2009) explores a further aspect of the professionalising 
process – notably the extent to which it generates increasingly burdensome 
amounts of paperwork. Amidst the flurry she notes teachers engaging in a 
discourse of what it means to do their job well as including the construction of 
particular types of teacher-student relationships. These include placing value 
on mutual respect and minimising hierarchy. Crossan and Gallecher (2009) 
develop further this idea of ‘learning relationship’ as key to understanding the 
stance adopted by practitioners based in community learning centres. They 
deploy concepts of emotion work, underground working and habitus to 
enliven an understanding of those relationships. They stress the importance 
of informal, relaxed and friendly pedagogic encounters.  The stance that is 
highly regarded here is one of equality and horizontality. These commitments 
bear close resemblance to approaches that may be found in contemporary 
liberatory or Freirean-inspired literacy pedagogy (Jacobson 2009).  

What I describe then as anti-professionalisation is a refusal of the 
distancing and privilege that attends the idea of achieving the professional 
status partly inscribed by Skills for Life, and partly found in the semiotic 
lingering of earlier classical associations: the idea of professionals as a high 
status, special occupational group. To be a literacy tutor is to adopt an anti-
professional stance compelled by a desire to make connections with the 
learners and their particular contexts.  

The possibilities of the professionalising process are limited. The 
bullet-point lists do not enter a blank slate of ALLN practice, and 
practitioners do not merely absorb and react with robotic obedience (Ball 
1993:12) to their determinations. They read, interpret, mediate and translate 
(Coffield et al 2008). They then form an opinion and work out what and how 
to do. The required policy is one of the resources they draw upon to achieve 
this. Within the professionalisation process there is always much more going 
on and much less going on than policy makers imagine (Kelchtermans 2007).  

T h e  p r o f e s s i o n a l i s a t i o n  o f  A L L N :  i s  i t  d e s i r a b l e ?    

In exploring the desirability of professionalisation, I ask whose interests 
does it serve? I have so far framed the process as policy rather than 
practitioner driven. I am mindful here that it is not always possible to separate 
policy makers and practitioners since a single individual may occupy several 
different spaces (Wickert 2001). Nor should describing  professionalisation as 
policy driven be taken to mean practitioners are not interested in improving 
practice (Hamilton and Hillier 2006). What I suggest here is the following. 
While social theorists have tended to associate professionalisation as 
connected to the agitations of practitioners to secure a more prestigious and 
rewarding place in an occupational market place, the shift of ALLN practice 



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from what was a campaign to a national strategy has, in its tone and texture, 
emerged from a space that is at some distance from practitioners and 
learners.  

M a n u f a c t u r i n g  f l e x i - w o r k e r s  

Within an environment where ‘risk has been globalised’ (Morley 2003) 
professionalisation represents the possibility of control amidst the inevitability 
of chaos. It is the antithesis of all that is multivocal, heterogeneous and 
unpredictable. Here enshrined in policy is the belief that the literacy a 
professionalised ALLN practitioner delivers - the literacy inscribed in Skills 
for Life - is the silver-bullet that pierces the heart of economic decline. The 
capacity to read and to write in a prescribed way is imbued with super-hero 
like qualities.  

The status of literacy skills as super-hero is a leitmotif that has 
dominated educational policy discourse re-represented here:   

In the 21st Century, our natural resource is our people – and 
their potential is both untapped and vast. Skills will unlock that 
potential. The prize for our country will be enormous – higher 
productivity, the creation of wealth and social justice. The 
alternative? Without increased skills, we would condemn 
ourselves to a lingering decline in competitiveness, diminishing 
economic growth and a bleaker future for all (Leitch, 2006:1). 

This faith in the power of skills was translated into a series of targets for 
qualifications.  

95 per cent of adults to achieve the basic skills of functional 
literacy and numeracy, an increase from levels of 85 per cent 
literacy and 79 per cent numeracy in 2005 (Leitch, 2006:3). 

Several interweaving strands of argumentation define the technical, 
cultural, political and economic changes that characterise globalisation. The 
internationalisation of production, restructuring of the labour market, the 
hyper-fluidity of capital and the need for flexible workers are some of its pick 
and mix features (Morley 2003). In this environment, education and training 
have become direct objects of, rather than adjuncts to, economic policy. 
What a globalised economy creates – according to some theorists - is a 
reduction in state power and an enhancement in the market. Policy attention 
shifted towards education in the 1980s onwards largely because with power 
residing in international corporations, it had nowhere else to go (Hodgson 
and Spours 1999:5).  

The increased focus on skills amounts to an increased focus on 
creating conditions that make the UK an attractive investment proposition for 
international corporations.  The new economy requires flexi-workers: 
workers imbued with desirable behaviours and attitudes.  While skills have 



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for a long time been valued by policy makers as the backbone of industry, 
their invested meanings have expanded exponentially (Payne 2000). My 
suggestion here is that the professionalisation of ALLN is a policy driven 
attempt to monitor and control a section of the service economy, which is key 
to the production of the kind of workers required in the new globalised work 
order. Professionalisation creates the mechanisms through which the literacy 
practices and citizenship status of sections of the population are marginalised, 
consecrated or stigmatised (Albright and Luke 2008).   

This implicates the ALLN practitioner in the creation of the flexi-
worker who is able to not only survive, but also thrive within the conditions 
created by a volatile international market place. The flexi-worker is willing to 
adapt their lives to accommodate the needs of the corporation; is willing to 
develop the personal skills and dispositions that enable them to cope with the 
insecurity of un / under (or over) employment. They are controllable and 
complicit in their own exploitation by being infused (enthused) with the ideals 
of the corporation (Peters and Austin 1985). Devoid of political ideals they 
are prepared to accept a redefined welfare state as springboard rather than 
safety net (Edwards 2003) and become responsible citizens i.e. literate 
learning citizens.  They are positioned by the policy as one being in a 
perpetual state of deficit, a deficit healed when they are willing to l/earn. 
Professionalisation implicates ALLN practitioners in this recreation of learner 
subjectivities (Hamilton 2009).    

U b i q u i t o u s  m a n a g e m e n t   

Professionalisation also creates anxieties in the micro world of 
practitioners (Morley 2003:6). It enables the policy maker to tell practitioners 
who their learners are (Dennis 2009:58), how they are envisioned, that is 
brought into the public gaze (client, customer, student or learner), and how 
their learning is valued and described. Through performance monitoring – 
performativity – new ways of steering / directing are created and the structure 
and culture of public services are recast. The processes here characterised as 
professionalisation, ensure that ALLN tutors are subject to judgements, 
classifications, and targets against which they are evaluated.  

Performativity defines the value of literacy and numeracy teaching as 
contained within that which can be recorded and quantitatively measured. 
Literacy, literacy learning and literacy learners are reduced to a series of 
observable tasks, activities and outcomes. That which cannot be measured or 
which does not contribute directly to performativity is without value.  

This philosophy filters through the everyday experiences and the social 
relations between tutors and students. In delivering the literacy inscribed in 
Skills for Life, the aim is to ensure that students are able to work towards 



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individually defined learning goals that are an expression of their personal 
aims, aspirations and interests. At the same time they have to comply with 
pre-defined outcomes listed in a core-curriculum. This is a conundrum of 
biblical proportions: how do practitioners reconcile free choice with 
predetermination? The two only become reconcilable through translation 
and betrayal. Students define goals and use a language that does not fit the 
learning outcomes that professionals are required to deliver – I want to feel 
more confident, I want to improve. These legitimate goals are not acceptable. 
They are difficult to record, monitor, list as performance indicators, and 
prove as achieved. The practitioner is required to change these expressions – 
and the goals themselves and the language they are described in - to meet 
what has been set out in core-curriculum documents, inspected though the 
common inspection framework and defined as quality. Management is thus 
ubiquitous and indivisible, inescapably embedded in everything we do. The 
learning relationship and with it the trust between practitioner and learner is 
interrupted.  The intrinsic value of education – the notion of literacy learning 
as anything other than an economic imperative, the idea of literacy as a 
human right, is outside the discursive framework.  There is within this context 
a displacement of anything that approaches a metaphysical discourse – 
principles of social justice and equity are made irrelevant or at least are only 
viewed through the prism of economic imperative; fables of hope, promise 
and opportunity are no longer part of the geography of ALLN.  

There are then several possible answers to the desirability of 
professionalising ALLN. To answer yes, it is desirable, is to adopt the 
perspective of a government subject to the imperatives of globalisation, 
struggling to re-orientate policy to ensure it is able to create conditions that 
promote economic competitiveness within the new international economic 
order.   

But the professionalised ALLN practitioner is a fantasy suffused by 
depthlessness and transparency. They are an anaesthetised, hollowed-out 
spectacle (Ball 2003) prepared to draw on inner resources for the corporate 
good: passionate about excellence, passionate about anything the corporation 
requires. They are prepared to teach not what students have struggled to 
articulate but that which has been predefined:  dupe or devil (Bathmaker 
2001) within a process that admits no other criteria for success.  

The pervasiveness of professionalisation demands a response – but not 
one that has been pre-defined. One may choose to be absorbed (prepared to 
act superficially in a way that suggests acquiescence while maintaining a 
quietly subversive stance) – ‘no one after all knows what’s going on in my 
mind’) or to be colonised (prepared to abandon any self-determined 
principles and become completely pre-defined by the corporation) by the 
new cultural ethos. Either way practitioners have no choice but to position 
themselves in relation to it. They are thus positioned by it.  



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The above discussion suggests that from the perspective of the policy 
maker, professionalisation is wholly desirable. It hints that for ALLN learners 
and practitioners it may be less so. But what about an exploration of the 
inevitability of professionalisation?  The new framework impacts upon the 
role of ALLN practitioners in profound ways. But the professionalisation 
invoked by policy makers is not an inevitable construct. To award it the status 
of predefined and unstoppable, is to award it the status of natural 
phenomenon, like the flow of a river. Inevitability it suggests there is nothing 
to be gained from exploring the ways practitioners may influence 
professionalisation – as policy or as practice. If ALLN practitioners are to 
locate agency, it is necessary to imagine what is and what might not be 
inevitable about the professionalising process.  

T h e  p r o f e s s i o n a l i s a t i o n  o f  A L L N :  i s  i t  i n e v i t a b l e ?    

In this section I am more speculative.  The prescribed 
professionalisation of Skills for Life is one of the discursive resources 
practitioners draw upon when deciding 'what and how to do'. But the only 
inevitability of policy prescription is its uneven implementation.  

My concluding section draws on a small scale research project, 
Controlling the Imagination, into the different meanings embedded in the 
notion of quality when applied to the teaching and managing of Skills for Life. 
It offers a glimpse of the inevitability of professionalisation. I draw, through a 
series of semi structured interviews with 16 ALLN teachers and managers in 
10 different organisations, on the voices of practitioners who teach and / or 
manage ALLN in the south of Englandi. The approach is one based loosely 
on grounded theory, with transcribed interviews analysed with the help of 
Atlas ti.  

Goodrham’s (2005) research with LSS workers is unequivocal. When 
asked about the status of their occupation, research participants did not see 
their practice as a ‘true’ profession. Nor did they regard the status of LSS 
practitioners as having ever been professional. In part this non-professional 
status was attributed to the fragmented nature of the practitioners’ role. This 
disassociation with professional status does not undermine the value placed 
on the important role practitioners play. In these shifting discourses ‘working 
professionally may signify something different from being a professional’ 
(Lather 1991 cited by Edwards 1997:157). The ALLN practitioners I 
interviewed1 had no doubt about the intrinsic value of their role, as one 
participant expressed it,  

We all assume an air of integrity about what we’re doing because 
I think it’s important […]       

ALLN, Program Manager (1) 



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Despite years of radical redefinition, practitioners retained what is most 
often associated with motivations that predate Skills for Life. I asked 
participants what made them start working in the field of ALLN.  

That’s really easy. It was almost as soon as I left university, I 
wanted to be involved in community development work. I 
wanted to be involved in learning and be involved in work I felt 
that addressed issues of disadvantage, poverty, and under 
achievement for the adult population. Almost pretty much the 
first thing I did on leaving university was to start as a literacy 
volunteer […], and loved it and thought, ‘This is great!’                                                                                

ALLN, Senior Manager (1) 

Yes … coming from an AEI background. Adult Education 
Institute background. […] brought me into contact with an awful 
lot of people who [....] would [...] be described as being under-
represented in education, but also disadvantaged in basic skills.                         
ALLN, Senior Manager (2) 

It is not that these participants were unaware of the policy prescriptions 
regarding why ALLN mattered. At other points during our conversation they 
were able to recount an in-depth understanding of the economic imperative 
that lay behind Skills for Life policy. What I notice here is that they make no 
reference to policy definitions of why Skills for Life matters in its economic 
framing when talking about their own motivations. There is an inconsistency 
between policy imperative and practitioner motivation.  

The data on how ALLN practitioners talk about what mattered to their 
practice gave rise to a framework that located a tension between what 
practitioners aspired to, and what was demanded of them. For example,  

I think there are two elements of [my role]. In terms of what the 
college demands as the quality program. There’s my role within 
that. And there’s also my role providing what I consider to be 
good quality service to the students.             

ALLN, Program Manager (2) 

This statement suggests that while practitioners strive to meet the 
external professionalisation requirements placed upon them, the actual 
needs, desires and possibilities of learners may remain unmet.  There was 
also tension between the prescriptions of professionalisation as an ambiguous 
abstraction in contrast to something that was embodied, the actual 
experiences of quality – sometimes at odds with publicly sanctioned policy or 
professionalisation discourses. These were shifting constructions and I made 
no attempt to locate fixed professional types or types of responses.  



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The line of thought I want to pursue here is one that imagines a space 
between aspiration and embodiment, a space that was reminiscent of ALLN 
as a community-based campaign.  

In riding the crest of the professionalising wave, ALLN practitioners 
commit themselves to implementing a policy not through any sense of 
allegiance to the policy itself but because of what the policy momentum 
enabled them to do. What it provided was an institutional resource to pursue 
ALLN practitioners’ long-held commitments.  

In the teams themselves, there’s a real commitment to Skills for 
Life. [...]  I think it’s correct to say, to the learners within the 
Skills for Life area. The Skills for Life thing is incidental. It’s the 
commitment to the learners.  

ALLN, Senior Manager (2) 

 In some instances Skills for Life has enhanced to a significant extent 
what had been a marginalised and misunderstood activity, 

For many years literacy, numeracy and ESOL was always the 
poor relation. And didn’t get the funding, didn’t get the priority 
in colleges, didn’t get the support, didn’t get the staffing. We had 
to make do with part-timers. All that stuff that went on years ago.     
ALLN, Senior Manager (2) 

With Skills for Life policy sponsorship, ALLN teachers and managers 
have struggled to position themselves in the mainstream activities of their 
organisation. 

In an attempt to embody, to make real their aspirations of Skills for 
Life, ALLN practitioners hijack the momentum and resource attached to 
policy to achieve their own purposes. There are glimmering shards here of 
the anti-professionalisation that pre-dates Skills for Life. Policy merely creates 
a particular environment and resources that in some instances practitioners 
are able to mobilise to meet what they see as the needs and entitlements of 
their learners.  This ‘campaigning’ ALLN practice makes aspirations real. 
This is one of many potential spaces for the nurturing of a ‘professional 
imagination’ (Power 2008); a space in which practitioners trace careful and 
expert steps between individualism and determinism.  

It is a space that denies the inevitability for professionalisation. It opens 
a space for further exploration. 

C o n c l u d i n g  r e m a r k s  

In this paper I have argued that the possibility of a professionalised 
ALLN practice may represent a road along which policy makers and 
practitioners may travel without ever reaching a final destination.  This relates 
to some extent to the nature of literacy and professional learning as a 



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D E N N I S  38 
 

thoroughly situated social practice, a shape shifting entity that refuses fixed 
form. It also relates to aspects of ALLN practitioner sensibilities that are at 
odds with the privileging and distancing implied by professional status.  

Central to this argument is the policy defined and driven nature of 
professionalisation. Policy prescription creates an environment within which 
practitioners work and implicates them in fulfilling an economic imperative 
for literate learning citizens with flexible dispositions able to service a 
globalised economy. Professionalisation is desirable for some. It allows policy 
makers to closely monitor the micro world of practice. Through 
professionalisation, policy makers become part of the pedagogic encounter.  
For the practitioner, driven by a commitment of horizontality in relationships, 
to equity and social justice, it is less so.  

Yet how policy makers imagine practice is other than how practitioners 
experience it. Once enacted, the process of implementing policy is a more 
actively mediated negotiation than a painting by numbers. The practitioner 
embodied policy is fractured, redefined and changed to suit the local ecology. 
Practitioners at times draw on the momentum provided by policy to make 
real their aspirations. It is possible to talk of implementing policy in terms 
reminiscent of ALLN as a campaign. It offers the opportunity to secure a 
mainstream place for ALLN learners. There is then no inevitability to a 
vertically controlled implementation. It is a policy driven process shaped by 
and filtered through the motivations and values of practitioners.  

 

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1 Pen portraits of research participants who were involved with ‘Controlling 
the Imagination’.  
 

 

Pen Portraits of Project Participants quoted in this paper 
ALLN, 
Program 
Manager (1) 

has worked in adult education as an ESOL specialist for some years. Her role 
includes a considerable amount of teaching and supporting other teachers. 
Although based in an FE college she is also responsible for off-site 
community provision. Employed as a manager with some teaching, she saw 
herself firstly as a teacher and placed great emphasis on the importance of 
this throughout our conversation. She narrates an organisational biography 
that equated quality with nothing more than hard work. She views ALLN 
provision as peripheral in a college that would rather be doing other more 
glamorous subjects. 

ALLN,  Senior 
Manager (1) 

is a long standing ALLN professional. Her role no longer had a direct ALLN 
focus and our conversation came about primarily because of her past 
connection.  I have had an extended day-to-day working relationship with this 
participant. She has a ‘holding brief’ for ALLN rather then direct line 
management responsibility. She had worked in the organisation for a number 
of years and at times had been a manager and teacher of ALLN in the 
college. The college has a very high profile reputation for quality in the area 
of work and has maintained a grade two for some time. There is a strong 
narrative through the college of it having changed from a failing organisation 
to one with a national profile.  

ALLN, 
Senior Manager 
(2)  

as a senior manager her role did not include teaching. She is a long time 
veteran of Skills for Life and has retained much of the evangelical zeal that 
led her to this area of work. At the time of the interview she was just about to 
be promoted to a more senior management position. The department has 
had a varied recent past. Having sustained a grade two for a number of years 
and a self-referenced reputation for quality and innovative provision, it 
expanded exponentially in a very short period of time and in the inspection 
before last was graded as unsatisfactory.  She has worked for the college 
throughout this time and her role has changed in relation to ALLN, from a 
direct curricular to overall strategic responsibility.  

ALLN,  
Program 
Manager (2) 

had a role that included both teaching and managing, two joined fractional 
posts to make up a single full-time role. Based in a further education college 
in London she has an English as a Foreign Language (EFL) background and 
had taught overseas for some years. The experience of working in the private 
sector and the entrepreneurial flair that came with it is something she carries 
with her into her current role. She arrived back in England at the start of the 
Skills for Life policy and has little recollection of a pre-Skills for Life FE 
sector.