1. Introduction
Despite the shift to state responsibility for education or schooling, this paper highlights that policy-makers have continually invited the community, external agencies, private companies, employers and voluntary organisations to become involved in schools. Policies from the early 1900s such as the Hadow Report (
Board of Education 1926) and a range of other policies discussed in this paper outline policy-makers’ concerns about pupils (e.g., behaviour, learning and wellbeing) and the perceived underlying issues (e.g., delinquency, lack of achievement or neglect). The policies propose to address these issues through a solution which includes the involvement of individuals and groups beyond the “state” in schools to deliver activities and services. This paper argues that these policies are underpinned by assumptions about pupils or their families and influenced by policy-makers’ ideologies.
McCulloch (
1993) warns that the state can contain different ideologies and interests which are evident across policies.
Matheson (
2008) agrees that these ideologies are not mutually exclusive and a policy could advocate both traditional and child-centred methods, despite these often being expressed as a dichotomy. This suggests that there is a complexity in the purpose of policies which encourage groups and individuals to collaborate in schools and those who respond maybe delivering hidden policy-makers’ ideologies.
This paper firstly presents a literature review, which discusses a range of educational policies that have advocated the involvement of individuals and groups beyond the state. The review reveals the underlying concerns, ideologies and solutions detailed in these policies. This paper argues that there is a lack of research with regard to how these collaborations are played out in practice, which is essential if these policies are underpinned by ideologies. Research is also lacking with the groups and individuals who are continually invited to collaborate with schools, which this paper calls “external agencies”. To address these gaps, this paper explores the involvement of external agencies in four schools: two middle schools and two secondary schools. The research questions from the doctoral research on which this paper focuses are: (1) Who are the external agents involved in the case study schools and what are they there to do? (2) Is the involvement of external agents related to government policies and initiatives or do other rationales exist? The methods include an audit pro-forma, interviews with school staff and external agencies and documentary analysis. It presents the types of external agencies involved, their activities and how these relate to educational policies to provide a sense of the external agency involvement across the four schools. This paper discusses the issues identified by the schools and external agencies as they respond to these policies and reveals the potential implications for pupils, schools and communities as these continual policies influence provision. Finally, this paper makes recommendations to improve the involvement of external agencies in schools.
3. Materials and Methods
This article is drawn from doctoral research with ethical approval where the aim is to investigate the phenomenon of external agents in schools, in terms of their role and responsibilities for the learning and wellbeing of children and young people (
Everitt 2018). The research questions from the doctoral research on which this paper focuses are: (1) Who are the external agents involved in the case study schools and what are they there to do? (2) Is the involvement of external agents related to government policies and initiatives or do other rationales exist?
The study aimed to include both primary and secondary schools and a convenience sample of 39 schools known to the researcher were approached through email and telephone, but this did not result in any school participants. Two intermediaries were used to approach a further 22 schools by email, from which four schools agreed to participate. This included two secondary schools (Compton Academy and Thornily Academy) for pupils aged 11–16 and two middle schools (Meadows Middle School and Sunnyside Church of England (C of E) Academy) for pupils aged 9–13. The final sample does not include primary schools, as the area is based on the middle school system, which is accepted as a limitation of this study.
Fifteen agents and seven members of staff participated across these four schools, as detailed in
Table 1, during the data collection period (2014).
Table 1 presents the participants’ names, roles, employers and the associated methods.
A staff member at each school was asked to complete an audit pro-forma with the external agency names and activities or services against seven types identified from the literature. These types included those that were contained in the Extended School
core offer such as extra-curricular activities, parental support, community use of the school or adult and community learning (
Department for Education and Skills 2005). The audit pro-forma also included individual pupil support which was activities and services where pupils required extra one-to-one support (
Department for Education and Skills 2004). Additionally, there was pupil group support which included workshops or assemblies for pupil groups in relation to the national curriculum or wider curriculum subjects (e.g., Citizenship, PSHE or Careers) (
Department for Education 2015;
Macdonald 2009). Staff knowledge of external agencies was incomplete (see below) so the audit pro-forma was supplemented with documentary analysis (e.g., newsletters, parent letters and Twitter feed). A staff member from each school was asked to participate in a semi-structured interview. Lack of participant time meant that in two schools one staff member completed the audit pro-forma and another was interviewed. Pseudonyms have been used for the names of the schools, staff members, external agencies and agents to maintain anonymity.
Purposive sampling was used to select the agencies from the list which emerged from across the data sources, at the time the interviews took place. In total, 44 agencies were invited by email, of which 15 semi-structured interviews were undertaken (see
Table 1). The agencies were invited across the activity or service type (see above), and the sector in which they worked (e.g., statutory, voluntary, community and private), but half of the final participants were from the third sector. There were 158 agencies identified as working across the four case study schools. Thornily had the most with 60 agencies and Meadows the least with 27. Compton had 30 and Sunnyside 31 agencies.
There was a messiness in the process to identify the external agencies as some school staff members’ knowledge was restricted by their role; for example, Ashley (Compton) was only able to identify 14 of the 30 agencies who were related to his role in careers education. All four case study schools used collective terms to describe the agencies (e.g., companies) or just used the activity name (e.g., healthy eating). Attempts were made to supplement the data with additional staff interviews; some declined and where extra staff were included (e.g., Meadows) it did not result in the identification of all of the agencies. The audit pro-forma and staff interviews were supplemented with documentary analysis, but this was limited as not all schools had a well-developed online presence. Several agencies were only mentioned once (e.g., newsletter) but this was perhaps due to a brief involvement such as Young Theatre whose involvement was just a 30 min theatre performance.
The interview recordings were fully transcribed and coded, to identify significant themes (
Stark and Torrance 2005). Content analysis was used to verify the contents in a rigorous manner through analysis, including frequency of words or categories (
Cohen et al. 2017). The researcher moved back and forth among the data, research questions and underpinning literature, as the units of analysis and themes emerged (
Ritchie and Lewis 2003). Codes were subsumed where necessary to assist with creating open and flexible coding categories (
Mason 2002). The documents located for each case study school were manually coded which was useful for the frequency of certain words or phrases (
May 2011). Each agency was coded to an activity type from the audit pro-forma, e.g., pupil group support, which were sub-codes in the coding structure. These activity types were then analysed in terms of their frequency per school, which allowed trends of activity types to be identified.
4. Results and Discussion
This section outlines the findings from the methods that were used (i.e., audit pro-forma, interviews and documentary analysis) and these findings are presented using themes identified in the literature review. Each theme includes a discussion of the related findings which have emerged and the issues, assumptions and solutions from policies which invite external agencies to collaborate with schools. The implications of these findings are discussed in relation to practice.
4.1. Constructive Activities Delivered by “Quasi-Military” Style External Agencies
This section discusses the findings that emerged, which were related to the policies where the theme is the need for external agencies with a military style to deliver constructive activities to certain pupils in schools.
The Uniformed Service could be described as a quasi-military style external agency that operates a membership structure. A newsletter from Thornily identified that Nigel from the Uniformed Service had visited a lesson in the school to promote his organisation. During his interview, Nigel revealed that his involvement in Thornily was a result of national funding that his service had received and he approached the school at a community meeting. This funding emanated from Youth United, an organisation created by Prince Charles (HRH The Prince of Wales). Nigel believed that Prince Charles wanted all uniformed organisations to unite and have a voice. However, in a Youth United Impact Report (
Youth United Foundation 2013, p. 2), Prince Charles outlined the problems caused by some young people:
We often hear about the trouble that young people are causing and the problems they face: gang culture, unemployment, drink, drugs and underachievement are just some of them.
These are the real problems, but in my view, this is only part of the story. Around the country, there are many thousands of young people who are involved in constructive activities which give them the chance to do something in the service of others, to learn valuable new skills and even have some fun.
This suggests the funding was aimed at certain young people and the response was the involvement of external agencies with membership structures to deliver constructive activities. This supports the comment by
Heyes (
2019) that the government are interested in uniformed services in the delivery of character education. Nigel stated that his organisation received this funding to set up groups in deprived areas and the groups were to be delivered by volunteers. It was Nigel who decided to approach schools:
We got money to employ about 10 development workers around the country using specific targeted area schools. As [local area] being a highly deprived area and our job was to go out and recruit volunteers to set up new groups. I wasn’t given any idea or any sort of plan where to go.
Nigel was unable to find volunteers so the group in Thornily did not take place, which concords with the findings by See
Beckett et al. (
2019) that setting up and running these programmes are difficult. This questions the government assumption that certain young people require constructive activities delivered by external agencies, as highlighted in older policies (e.g., Hadow Report) (
Board of Education 1926). Indeed, Nigel questioned the ideology behind the target audience of the groups and the intended role of the external agencies:
I think the assumption was well there’s plenty of voluntary groups out there for young people to go to, so we’ll just cut the centre. I think that this is not very good thinking, because children who go to youth centres or engage with youth centres don’t necessarily want to engage with a uniform organisation.
This comment by Nigel reveals a complexity in the assumptions which underpin this funding, as Nigel viewed his service was for a different audience than what was planned by the funding. Both this funding, as indicated by Prince Charles in the Youth Impact Report (
Youth United Foundation 2013), and youth centres were created for certain pupils who require constructive activities (
Roberts 2004), but Nigel believed otherwise. This does not appear to suggest the holistic focus of the character education as indicated by the schools in the research by
White et al. (
2017) but these funded activities were to be targeted at certain pupils.
This paper compliments the research by
Brooks (
2012, p. 18) who warns that policy-makers have assumptions which view pupils as disaffected and the government are funding external agencies to work in schools. Furthermore, these policies advocate that pupils required character development through “quasi-military environments” to achieve their societal duty, which is apparent in the more recent character grants launched in 2015 (
Rt. Hon. Nicky Morgan MP 2015). What this paper adds is not only the prevalence of current examples of the involvement of external agencies, but that the assumptions that certain young people require constructive activities delivered by external agencies with membership structures have persisted from earlier policies such as the Hadow Report (
Board of Education 1926). It is important for external agencies and schools to be aware of ideologies which can underpin funding or policies which encourage these collaborations and to think about whose interests are at work.
4.2. External Agencies Perceived as Specialists
This section discusses the findings which emerged in relation to policies which encourage the external agencies deemed as specialists to collaborate with schools.
Connected Counselling are a charity that had been commissioned by Meadows to provide counselling to pupils. The charity was mentioned by Adam, a teacher, listed on the pro-forma (by Aileen) and included in a pupil premium report (on funding spent). A counsellor from Connected Counselling spent one day per week in Meadows to deliver counselling sessions to pupils. Kiely from Connected Counselling highlighted that the demand for their service was influenced by the complexity in the backgrounds of some pupils which was impacting their learning:
I am hearing a lot that you know there are a lot more complex backgrounds of these young people and that’s having a knock-on effect with their learning and they [schools] want to support the child holistically. So it’s about the child feeling happy and being settled before they can learn to the best of their ability and that is becoming more and more recognised I think.
(Kiely, Connected Counselling)
This suggested Kiely held the belief that the school and community were interconnected influences as suggested by
Harris et al. (
2010). However, the involvement of external agencies could equally be about reducing the social problems which could hinder the expected economic value from education.
Connected Counselling was the only commissioned external agency, which implied this counselling was a service the school could not provide, as reported in the research on the pupil premium by
Carpenter et al. (
2013). There is also an element of profit-making through these specialist services, as suggested by
Ball (
2012), although Adam (Meadows) highlighted that, despite the need, that finance was a barrier:
It’s the budget restrictions and it is just adding more onto our load, but I would say the pastoral care side of things is probably more important than delivering the curriculum, you’re kind of dealing with emergencies at side and our hands are tied a bit when we are trying to stick to our timetable and things.
(Adam, Meadows)
This suggests that there is either a lack of budget or activities such as one-to-one support are expensive, as highlighted by
Higgins et al. (
2013), which could restrict the agencies used by the school, despite the pupil premium funding. The issues of cost could account for the lack of one-to-one support, which were also highlighted by
Diss and Jarvie (
2016). The Newsom Report (
Ministry of Education 1963) perceived the involvement of specialists as a cost-effective method to dealing with social problems, but this was before external agencies were encouraged to charge (
Ball 2012). Despite the encouragement to charge and potential commissioning through the pupil premium, available finance to commission agencies was an issue. This was perhaps recognised by Sparks, a Christian youth project that also delivered wellbeing activities (e.g., puppet club) in Sunnyside and Mentoring in Meadows, as they did not charge. Sparks were mentioned in a range of data sources for both Sunnyside and Meadows such as the audit pro-forma and interviews. Phil (Sparks) revealed that they did not charge as they did not want to be another drain on school finances. However, some schools did not always unpack the reason for the activities or the associated cost to the agent:
Sometimes we’re asked to go and work with individual children on a one-to-one mentoring basis. We’ve learned over the years, for us as an organisation, we’ve done mentoring that’s open ended which just seems to go on and on and on. That again was down to the expectation of the school.
Any time we’re asked to do mentoring, we’ve agreed to do a couple of sessions to see how it goes … if they want to continue...what the point of it is...if the kids understand why they are there … cos it might not work.
This questions the assumptions which underpin the involvement of external agencies, for instance with Sparks the delivery of specialist activities is seen as cost effective. There are clearly differences between the expectations of Sparks and the schools, which indicates potential tensions as suggested by
Ainslie et al. (
2010). These findings highlight that Sparks were providing a solution to the demand for wellbeing activities, in the competing landscape of reduced local authority provision outlined by
Thraves et al. (
2012) and budget restrictions highlighted by Adam. This has implications for the external agencies, if they do not charge and pupils if the rationale for the activities are not always fully explored with pupils, which could imply a deficit model.
4.3. Supporting the National Curriculum or the Social Aspects of Schooling
This section discusses the findings which emerged in relation to the policies which encouraged external agencies to collaborate with schools to support the national curriculum or social aspects of schooling, whilst teachers focus on the national curriculum.
Despite the discussion in the literature for external agencies to support the wider curriculum, or the social aspects of schooling (
Ball 2012) there were five external agent participants who indicated during their interviews that their activities supported the national curriculum. These five external agencies included Road Safety (statutory service), Rare Disease (charity), Building Maintenance (business), ABC Engineering (employer) and Sparks (Christian youth charity).
Road Safety were featured in two Sunnyside newsletters and a parent calendar which stated they visited PSHE and Citizenship lessons, which indicated a wider curriculum link. Their organisation was listed on the audit pro-forma, but was not mentioned in the interview with Linda (Principal). Peter from Road Safety emphasised that it was his teaching background which meant he could make links to the national curriculum. He added that external agencies such as his organisation and the police have credibility which enable them to get the message across in PSHE, as highlighted in research by
Macdonald (
2009). However, the value of the activities towards the national or wider curriculum was not always perceived by schools, even if pupils enjoyed the activities:
Some of the things we do, the kids afterwards say it’s great, it’s different, it’s practical, it’s not maths again [and] it’s not English. Although a lot of it does link in, if the teacher lets it link in.
(Peter, Road Safety)
This suggests that, despite the assumption that external agencies can support the curriculum, it is perhaps that the social aspects of schooling are not seen as relevant in the drive for an economic return. In this sense, the involvement of external agencies could be restricted by the schools.
The next external agency that suggested their activities support the national curriculum was Building Maintenance, a construction company. Keith from Building Maintenance revealed that his organisation was involved in Thornily through Business in the Community (BITC) and had delivered 50 projects during the previous three years. Building Maintenance was mentioned on the audit pro-forma, during the interview with Sian (Thornily) and on the school’s Twitter feed. From the 50 projects that Building Maintenance had undertaken with Thornily, Keith emphasised that a mentoring project between his employees and 20 mixed-ability pupils was “strategic”. He believed the employees were role models who could raise disadvantaged pupils’ aspirations, which appeared in line with policy-maker assumptions (see
Department for Children, Schools and Families 2009a). Sian revealed that, despite the suggested benefits of the mentoring it was moved between curriculum time and after-school due to new performativity measures (Progress 8) (
Department for Education 2017b, p. 7), which questioned the perceived value to the standards agenda:
It is not just about resources it is about time and the impact away from the end result that schools are interested in, which is the GCSE or not the GCSE … I think there’s potential for a lot more scrutiny of bringing outside agencies in.
(Sian, Thornily)
The external agencies themselves perceive that their activities are valuable to the national curriculum, which is perhaps a false assumption influenced by the continual requests for them to be involved. The schools are perceiving the external agencies as valuable to the social aspects of schooling, whilst the teachers focus on the national curriculum (
Wyness and Lang 2016). The mentoring delivered by Building Maintenance was moved to after-school, which suggests a tussling for the time within the school day, but this had an impact on pupils:
The pupils didn’t like it when it was in their own time, it came across as a bit of a punishment.
(Keith, Building Maintenance)
The last example of an external agent referring to the national curriculum was ABC Engineering, which was involved in Thornily and were mentioned on the audit pro-forma, in Sian’s interview and a school newsletter. Serena from ABC Engineering revealed that, whilst her organisation was involved in the delivery of the national curriculum, it was just a one-off:
We do one-off projects usually to support them with a piece of work they are doing. It is usually the design and technology teachers that we have the most involvement with. They’re [Thornily] desperate to get across the importance of design, technology and engineering in the school, so for them we held a STEM day.
(Serena, ABC Engineering)
Sian (Thornily) emphasised that visits from external agencies to curriculum areas was occasional, so it appeared that the involvement of ABC Engineering was indeed a one-off. This has implications for external agencies that want to be involved in schools as their involvement in the national curriculum might be restricted. The discussion of these agents, which all implied their activities supported the national curriculum, indicates a different perception between agencies and schools. Although the
Department for Education (
2019) and the
PSHE Association (
2020) advocate that external agencies should enrich the work of teachers in the now compulsory PSHE, the external agencies clearly believe that they have something to offer both to and beyond the social aspects of schooling. The views of pupils do not appear to have always been considered which is important as highlighted by Road Safety and in the research by
Beckett et al. (
2019) in terms of the value of involving external agencies.
4.4. External Agencies Involved around Concept of Social Inclusion
The section discusses the findings which emerged in relation to the themes from policies which invited external agencies to be involved in schools to support the concept of social inclusion.
The policies which encouraged external agencies to work in schools to support social inclusion include Every Child Matters and its delivery mechanism of the Extended School agenda. The number and types of agencies that could be involved in the delivery of these policies is vast, due to the different activities and services outlined within the
core offer of an Extended School (
Department for Education and Skills 2005). However, the findings of this paper suggest there was a lack of involvement of external agencies in the case study schools in relation to the
core offer areas (e.g., extra-curricular activities, community use of school, individual pupil support, parental support and adult and community learning). This was determined by the activity or service of each of the 158 external agents, which were cross-referenced to the activity types on the audit pro-forma. There were only 16 instances of external agency involvement in extra-curricular activities across the four schools. This was supported by both the interview data and the documentary analysis for two schools. In Compton, Ashley, a teacher, revealed that the extra-curricular activities were delivered by school staff. Similarly, for Meadows, an extra-curricular activity plan detailed 22 weekly activities but these were mainly delivered by school staff. This appears to reflect the impact of the Coalition (between Conservative and Liberals) government’s de-prioritisation of social exclusion as highlighted by
Fahmy et al. (
2018).
There were no instances of external agency involvement in the community use of the school in Meadows and only 13 instances of agencies involved, across the other three schools. There were only nine instances of individual pupil support. There were very few instances of parental support or adult and community learning and none in Compton and Meadows.
Diss and Jarvie (
2016) highlight that there can be differences between primary and secondary schools, with the latter being more likely to offer adult learning; however, Compton Academy is a secondary school. It could be that the schools never offered these in the first place. There were 111 instances of pupil group support, which suggests a shift towards activities delivered to groups of pupils as opposed to the Extended School
core offer which included a focus on wider audiences (e.g., families, adults). This is perhaps to be expected since the de-prioritisation of the concept of social exclusion by the Coalition government (Conservative and Liberals) since 2010 (
Fahmy et al. 2018). Adam (Meadows) suggested the reduction in external agencies was influenced by the national curriculum focus and financial constraints:
There was a lot more services in my first year and over the course of the three-four years I have been here, it has dwindled away and I am 95% that it is down to budget. We absolutely want to provide the best for the kids but yes I mean it is down to budget requirements. You have to have a certain amount number of staff that deliver the curriculum and that is a priority.
(Adam, Meadows)
The reduction in external agency involvement in Extended School activities adds to the research by
Diss and Jarvie (
2016) who also report a shift in activity focus back to pupils. This is not surprising given the changes in the funding for the Extended School agenda (
Maddern 2010). However, Diss and Jarvie did not explore if external agencies were still involved in schools and if so what they were doing, which is the focus of the rest of this paper.
4.5. Supporting Schools in Times of a Reduced State
The section discusses the findings in relation to themes from policies which focused on the need for external agencies to support schools in times of a reduced state. This is characterised by direct to school funding, direct to external agency funding or the transfer of responsibility without funding.
There were two external agencies where some of their activities appeared to be driven by the reduction in local authority provision. The first of these was Together Housing, a housing association involved in Meadows. Their involvement was outlined in a news story on the Meadows website, but they were not mentioned by school staff. Glenn (Together Housing) emphasised that their organisation was expected to deliver previous statutory provision for free:
Often, we are finding that we are stepping into gaps left where other services have withdrawn or don’t exist anymore, so previously a lot of the stuff that we do, would have been done by statutory bodies that either don’t exist now or have had the funding reduced to the extent that they are ineffective.
(Glenn, Together Housing)
The Fire Service had been involved in Sunnyside for many years and they were mentioned in a range of sources such as the audit pro-forma and Linda’s interview. Jack from the Fire Service revealed how recently he had been involved in Sunnyside to speak to pupils who were late for school:
They [Sunnyside] have had a group of people who have been late for school [or] not coming to school as often as they should be. So they are working with them daily, weekly, monthly to try to turn them around, put a request in for me, rang me up, with the link I have got at the school, saying ‘Jack would you mind coming, when you are available, just to give a 10–15 min chat to these people?’
(Jack, Fire Service)
The delivery of pastoral support around attendance would have been a statutory provision prior to the reduction of local government such as education welfare officers, as reported by
Henderson et al. (
2016). The above findings in this paper argue that the external agencies are being expected to fill provision gaps that are being created by the rolling back of the state. There are issues here with regard to whether the external agencies are the most appropriate to deliver the activities, beyond the fact that they do not charge. There could be concerns about the quality of what is being provided, as suggested in the research by
Formby et al. (
2011). This indicates the problems within policies which assume that local authority provision can be reduced and other organisations will step forward to fill the gaps that are created.
The findings also suggest that the shift in responsibility for the provision of career guidance from the local authority to schools, without accompanied funding, has increased the involvement of external agencies with a focus on careers. Twenty-one of the 158 external agencies identified across the four schools were employers, who were engaged in the schools for careers talks, careers marketplaces and workshops. There were also colleges, universities and training providers, which gave a total of 35 agencies (23%) that focused on careers which included four agent participants (Work Skills, Red Bricks, West College and Career Med). Sian (Thornily) revealed the school’s decision not to purchase the local authority careers service, was due to lack of finance, but she believed her careers background meant she could be impartial. She revealed that some schools “will attempt to deliver impartiality by bringing a whole range of people in”. However, Sian acknowledged that she herself did bring a lot of external agencies, which questions the impartiality, a practice warned against in the research by
Slack et al. (
2013).
Red Bricks were involved in Compton and, whilst they were clearly involved in the school for careers events, they were not mentioned on the pro-forma or interview; they were only mentioned in one Tweet, suggesting a low profile. Whilst the involvement of external agencies such as Red Bricks in schools contribute to careers events, their access to some schools was limited. Thus, whilst policies might assume that external agencies will automatically be able to access schools, in response to requests, this is not necessarily the case. Elaine (Red Bricks) warned that “as an employer approaching the school … you can come up against closed doors”. It could be that schools perceive they are already working with employers or careers advisors and are unaware of what the external agencies can offer. However, the findings indicate that there are other policies such as the raising of the participation age (RPA) (
Department for Education 2015) and increase in number of academies, which meant that some external agencies were denied access to schools:
The change of government wanting all schools to turn into academies… [a lot] go on to have sixth forms … their attitude to letting you have access to their pupils, changes dramatically. [They] now see you as the enemy...the students aren’t getting to choose for themselves ... they might go into something that is not quite right ... then dropping out...if you’ve had all the options then you know which is the right route.
(Leanne, West College)
This could therefore impact on young people if they are not receiving impartial information and advice, despite the increased numbers of external agencies (e.g., employers) involved in careers. This paper reveals how continued policies (e.g.,
Department for Education 2017a) appeared to have tipped the balance in terms of the types of agencies involved in schools. However, competing policies can restrict access also hidden costs which are not necessarily considered. The cost of involving external agencies (e.g., employers) has implications for the agencies, as outlined by
Huddleston and Laczik (
2012). Whilst there were a range of agencies from the 158 identified that supported schools with a plethora of activities, the desire to support schools with career guidance and filling gaps in provision offered by the local authority is influencing who is involved and what they are doing. The paper also highlights the impact that austerity measures have had on pupils.
5. Conclusions
The findings of this paper reveal that the assumptions and proposed solutions involving external agencies advocated in policies (e.g., character education, careers education and extended schools) are related to the ideologies around the purposes of education. This paper argues that it is important to consider the interests at work in policies that encourage external agencies into schools. These policies are impacting on current practice in terms of the types of agencies involved and the activities they undertake. The government assumes that their policies will automatically benefit the pupils, their families, schools, external agencies and wider society. These benefits are not automatic and this paper highlights how these assumptions are problematic—using themes from selected policies which invited external agencies to become involved in schools and then primary research undertaken in four case study schools.
This paper highlights how the invitations for quasi-military external agencies within policies has continued since the early 1900s (
Board of Education 1926) to more recent policies (e.g., character grants) (
Rt. Hon. Nicky Morgan MP 2015). These policies appear to be based on assumptions that certain pupils require constructive activities. This paper highlights that there are different perceptions around the purpose and target audience of these activities and some difficulties in recruiting volunteers, as highlighted by
See et al. (
2017).
Policies which called for the involvement of specialists (e.g., Newsom Report) (
Ministry of Education 1963) perceived the involvement of external agencies as a cost-effective solution. Despite the allocation of addition funding (e.g., pupil premium) to enable schools to commission agencies (
Ofsted 2013b) the cost remains an issue. The government encouraged external agencies to charge (
Ball 1997), which overlapped with the reduction to local authority provision (see
Thraves et al. 2012). However, the budget restrictions cited by the participants in this study, meant that charging schools might not be possible. The result was that external agencies were being asked to support pupils with complex backgrounds with support beyond the national curriculum—based on the fact that the agent did not charge. The selection of external agencies based on the offer of free activities alone, has implications for the external agencies and pupils.
The introduction of the national and wider curriculum has encouraged external agency involvement in schools. This includes supporting the social aspects of schools such as PSHE (see
Watkins 1992). External agency involvement in PSHE was valuable due to agents’ credibility or their ability to offer free activities, but quality was a concern (
Formby et al. 2011). This paper argues that, although there is a recent shift to the delivery of PSHE by teachers, this does not remove the desire for credibility, as highlighted by
Beckett et al. (
2019). This paper reveals how several external agents believed that their activities are valuable to the national curriculum and this needs to be explored. However, external agencies need to be aware that schools may control access to schools, as they navigate competing demands.
The changes to policies such as the reduction in funding for Extended School activities (
Maddern 2010) and de-prioritisation of social exclusion (
Fahmy et al. 2018) does not automatically mean that these issues no longer exist. This paper reveals a shift in focus of activities back to pupils, which adds to the research by
Diss and Jarvie (
2016). This shift is apparent in the higher numbers of some external agencies (e.g., employers) that are responding to specific policies (e.g., careers guidance) (
Department for Education 2017a). This paper argues that there are concerns around impartiality for pupils if large numbers of external agencies are used instead of qualified career guidance professionals, which adds to previous research by
Slack et al. (
2013). In addition, access might be restricted due to competing policies (e.g., RPA), which suggests that agencies may be hindered in accessing schools.
This study argues that it is important that schools are aware of which external agencies are involved in their schools. Road Safety was not mentioned within the Meadows or Compton data, and their involvement in those schools only became apparent during their interview for Sunnyside. It is possible that the staff member who had knowledge of the external agencies was not a participant. This messiness or complexity meant that what was identified was only a “snapshot” of external agency involvement. This appears influenced by the history of policies which have encouraged schools to collaborate with external agencies. It could indicate a disconnection between the agent perception of their role and their profile within the school in relation to the demand to meet these continual policy requests. The implications of this are that the four case study schools did not appear to have a strategic or co-ordinated approach to involving external agencies and this is important if external agencies are to work in schools. Specific staff roles influenced knowledge of agencies and a co-ordinated approach is important to reduce the messiness. It appeared that some agents were involved to respond to a policy and it does not matter who the agent is, just that the activity is delivered. There are issues over equality within the education system for the activities of external agencies, but there are also concerns around the quality of what is delivered.
The implications for external agencies include the need to recognise there are still invitations to be involved in schools but policies and funding constrain the type of agent and activities, with schools mediating access. Competing ideologies and complexities could impact on their involvement in schools. There is a need to navigate these complexities to enter. It is important that agencies consider the other interests at work if they receive external funding. There is a suggestion that schools believe that what external agencies can offer will complement what is already there—and not replace it. For schools and teachers, the implications are that they need to recognise that agents wants to be involved, but have issues in access and navigating these complexities. They are also encouraged into schools through policies underpinned by political ideologies. The implications for pupils is that the external agencies might not be the right person to deliver and that funding could mean it becomes a tick-box exercise—with concerns around quality. The activity can be created within a deficit model, which takes place without a discussion with the pupil. Pupils may not be getting all the information that is available to them (e.g., for careers) as it is being restricted by competing policies. This suggests a lack of social justice. There is still a wellbeing need, but funding constraints means there is a potential for low quality activities in this area. There are hidden costs are related to the missed hours towards qualifications which relate to the standards agenda. For parents or communities, the implications are that the range of activities and services once offered through schools via the Extended School or Every Child Matters agenda might be reduced. For government, if external agents are to respond to these continual policy requests, they require support to enable them to gain access to schools.