268 results
Search Results
2. New philanthropy in education in Portugal: fabricating social inclusion as policy, knowledge and practice.
- Author
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Carvalho, Luís Miguel and Viseu, Sofia
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL policy , *SOCIAL integration , *NON-state actors (International relations) , *EDUCATION policy , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *CORPORATE giving , *TEACHERS - Abstract
This paper addresses the ways through which new philanthropy in education is being enacted in Portugal, focusing on one of its significant imaginaries: social inclusion. We analyse EPIS (Entrepreneurs for Social Inclusion), a top association dedicated to corporate philanthropy with a growing presence in the education system. Drawing on Popkewitz's concept of fabrication, it examines EPIS' programmes and deliverables as technologies that constitute social inclusion as an object of policy, knowledge and practice, targeting students (transforming 'at-risk' students into entrepreneurs), teachers and schools (transforming their cultures to become performance-oriented), and the relationship between State and non-State actors (fostering the State's adoption of a rule-following role, dependent on knowledge generated by non-State actors). This paper suggests that new philanthropies' social inclusion imaginary enacts a system of reason that promulgates results-oriented and evidence-based approaches to educational policy and knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The <italic>aporia</italic> of education policy: national school reform and the limits of policy enactment.
- Author
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Orchard, Hannah, Hickey, Andrew, and Riddle, Stewart
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATION policy , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SCHOOL rules & regulations , *CIVIL service - Abstract
In this paper, we deploy the concept of
aporia to consider the ways in which enactments of policy become ‘stuck’ as policyflows between national and sub-national education systems. We illustrate the overlapping political, governmental and bureaucratic spheres of influence that mediate how national school reform agendas are received and enacted by schooling systems. Our analysis is based on interviews with senior bureaucrats from an Australian non-government sector’s national and state peak bodies representing Queensland, New South Wales, Tasmania and the Northern Territory. Drawing on conceptualisations of aporia as animpasse and more deliberatively, Lather’s interpretation of aporia as ‘moments of possibility’, we argue that aporias created by bureaucratic barriers, government timelines, government evaluation processes and the placement of accountability measures over schooling prevents the meaningful enactment of policy within school settings. We argue that there is a need to consider the generative possibilities that exist within this situation of policy aporia, and demarcate where possibilities to move beyond ‘stuck’ policy might arise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. School climate from a figurational perspective: a case study of Chilean education policies and laws.
- Author
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Webb, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT regulation , *SCHOOL environment , *EDUCATION policy , *SCHOOL violence , *GOVERNMENT policy on climate change - Abstract
School climate policies have, broadly speaking, been analysed in terms of their effectiveness against violence in schools, or from critical perspectives that question the normative nature of their discursive ‘truths’. In this paper I propose a complementary approach, inspired by Norbert Elias’s processual sociology to address the long-term and unintended directions that school climate policies and laws have taken. Drawing on historical secondary sources from the nineteenth century up the present I demonstrate the spurts of civilizing tendencies that have brought about greater sensitivity to dialogue-based approaches to conflict in schools. I propose that although these policy turns do not occur outside power relations and specific interests (what Elias calls power ratios), the complexity of how they have developed over time cannot be reduced to disciplining or regulatory governance. In this regard, figurational perspectives have a lot to contribute to analyses of school climate specifically, and education policies in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Sustainability as Wild Policy: Mobile SDG Interventions and Land-informed Policy in Education.
- Author
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McKenzie, Marcia and Wilson, Alex
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,CREE (North American people) ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATION research ,MOBILE learning ,INDIGENOUS rights - Abstract
This paper engages narratives from Tess Lea's (2020) book 'Wild Policy' for how they help consider the messy or 'wild' nature of global policy interventions on sustainability, including in its latest formation as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). We do so alongside data from research on education in the territory of Nunavut, as well as informed by our experiences as settler and Cree university researchers concerned with place and land-informed education policy. Engaging with a methodological framing of policy ecology, the article considers both policy artifacts and 'ambiences' or materialities, and their interrelations. We examine how a Saskatchewan university's draft SDG plan manifests aspects of pre-fabricated globally mobile 'wild policy', including in its gaps in land-informed Indigenous engagement. Instead, we suggest how more systemic and decolonizing approaches to land-informed education policy, as in development in Inuit-based higher education in Nunavut, can inform both future policy decision-making and policy research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A prism of the educational utopia: the East Asian Educational Model, reference society, and reciprocal learning: Comparing high-performing education systems: understanding Singapore, Shanghai, and Hong Kong, by Charlene Tan, Oxon, Routledge, 2018, 270 pp., $12.60 (paperback), ISBN 978-0815375920
- Author
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Zhu, Gang
- Subjects
UTOPIAS ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,PRISMS ,EDUCATION associations - Abstract
This paper discusses the emergence of the new global educational governance characterized by 1) global educational reform movement, 2) the active participation of the international organizations in global educational policy making, and 3) the emerging performative culture. Against this background, this article contextualizes the East Asian Educational Model (Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong) and its operation mechanism by appropriating the Confucian habitus and educational harmonization. Then this study compares the EAEM, the high performing educational system, and the representative global fourth-way countries by interrogating the underling binary—new orientalism vs. reciprocal learning. Finally, this paper draws some implications by learning from these different educational systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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7. The multiple effects of international large-scale assessment on education policy and research.
- Author
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Lewis, Steven and Lingard, Bob
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research ,LARGE-scale drawing ,TOPOLOGY ,POLICY analysis - Abstract
This paper introduces a serendipitous special issue ofDiscourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, focusing on the rise of large-scale international testing and performance data in school system accountability and the effects that such changes have produced in education policy and research. These developments are theorised in terms of the reworking of the State and networked modes of governance, including the increased involvement of edu-businesses in education policy-making and enactment, and the emergence of new topological spatialities and connectivities associated with globalisation. We contend that the prevalence of international large-scale assessments has greatly enhanced the mutual ‘visibility’ between participating national (and subnational) schooling systems within a commensurate space of measurement, which in turn makes possible new ways of acting in light of ‘evidence-informed’ policy-making. This analysing and theorising serves to both contextualise and introduce the papers included in this special issue. The paper closes by considering the implications of such developments on education policy and research, and how this necessitates the development for a new approach for researchers engaged in policy analysis, now and into the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The teacher ‘problem’: an analysis of the NSW education policy Great Teaching , Inspired Learning.
- Author
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Stacey, Meghan
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,NEOLIBERALISM ,TEACHERS ,EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper seeks to understand the construction of teachers within one New South Wales education policy, querying this construction in relation to both local and international processes and factors. As such, it also looks to contribute to a growing body of international literature which grapples with the role and nature of neoliberal policy development in education more broadly. To accomplish this, the paper analyses Great Teaching, Inspired Learning (GTIL), a policy with wide-ranging and potentially significant ramifications for teachers. Ultimately it is argued that although aspects of neoliberal thinking are evident in the policy, particularities of context have mediated this push. It is suggested that this has led to a particular neoliberalisation of policy that variously targets and supports individual teachers and the systems and structures surrounding them, while the place of GTIL within both local state politics and the global imaginary is questioned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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9. Test-based accountability, standardized testing and minority/racialized students' perspectives in urban schools in Canada and Australia.
- Author
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Rezai-Rashti, Goli M. and Lingard, Bob
- Subjects
STUDENT attitudes ,ACADEMIC achievement ,URBAN schools ,MINORITY students ,SECONDARY school students ,SOCIAL classes - Abstract
This paper focuses on the perspectives of minority/racialized students in urban high schools. It is based on findings of interviews with 85 students in six secondary schools in Toronto and Vancouver, Canada, and in Melbourne, Australia, during 2016–2019. While there has been increasing attention to closing the racial achievement gap and some minority students' underachievement in education, there are limited studies that centre the voices of students and their experiences with provincial and nationally mandated testing. This paper is not an investigation into minority students' achievement; rather it seeks to understand how minority students perceive and experience this new form of test-based accountability. Grounding the analysis within theories of policy sociology and neoliberal accountability, this paper concludes that current policies of standardized testing have catalysed further inequities and segregation of students based on their 'race' and social class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Future uncertainty and the production of anticipatory policy knowledge: the case of the Israeli future-oriented pedagogy project.
- Author
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Ramiel, Hemy and Dishon, Gideon
- Subjects
EXPECTATION (Psychology) ,EDUCATION policy ,POLICY discourse ,POLICY analysis - Abstract
This paper explores the production of educational policy discourse based on a view of increasing future unpredictability, focusing on how educational policy knowledge is reconceptualized as a form of anticipatory regime. Specifically, we investigate the Israeli Ministry of Education's Future-Oriented Pedagogy Research and Development Unit, analyzing how the unit produces ways of knowing for policymaking based on the epistemic value of anticipation. Through critical policy analysis of the unit's documents, we explore its structure and rationale, describing two key epistemological mechanisms driving anticipatory educational policy. First, the appeal to 'trends' as a means of generating a certain vision of the future. The centrality of trends establishes a discourse in which policies are subordinated to a future that is at once unpredictable yet inevitable. Second, the introduction of 'adaptivity' as a key educational response to unpredictability, positioning constant change and reaction to external developments as the organizing principle of educational systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Reforming governance through policy instruments: how and to what extent standards, tests and accountability in education spread worldwide.
- Author
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Verger, Antoni, Fontdevila, Clara, and Parcerisa, Lluís
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL accountability ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements - Abstract
In the last decades, most countries have adopted data-intensive policy instruments aimed at modernizing the governance of education systems, and strengthening their competitiveness. Instruments such as national large-scale assessments and test-based accountabilities have disseminated widely, to the point that they are being enacted in countries with very different administrative traditions and levels of economic development. Nonetheless, comparative research on the trajectories that governance instruments follow in different institutional and socio-economic contexts is still scarce. On the basis of a systematic literature review (n = 158), this paper enquires into the scope and modalities of educational governance change that national large-scale assessments and test-based accountability instruments have triggered in a broad range of institutional settings. The paper shows that, internationally, educational governance reforms advance through path-dependent and contingent processes of policy instrumentation that are markedly conditioned by prevailing politico-administrative regimes. The paper also reflects on the additive and evolving nature of educational governance reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Elite schooling in the city: the model minority myth and urban education.
- Author
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Davila Jr., Omar
- Subjects
- *
URBAN education , *ELITISM in education , *URBAN renewal , *URBAN schools , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The movie Try Harder! features a group of students at Lowell High School in San Francisco, California, as they navigate their elite public institution and apply to top-tier universities. A critical analysis of this film allows us to understand new trends and emerging discourses in urban cities, showing the way racialized groups are pit against each other to legitimize white supremacy. I employ the lenses of critical studies of race to examine the following questions: (1) how does the model minority myth shape urban contexts? and (2) how are racial, political, and academic discourses constructing notions of merit via the film Try Harder? Few studies examine the model minority myth in relation to urban contexts, despite its rising influence in political debates and education policy. This paper aims to fill this void by addressing the changing landscape of urban education and academic discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Data disaggregation and its discontents: discourses of civil rights, efficiency and ethnic registry.
- Author
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Fu, Shuang and King, Kendall
- Subjects
CIVIL rights ,MOVEMENT education ,POLITICAL debates ,DISCOURSE ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
This paper examines recent political debates surrounding data disaggregation in education policy in one US state, and analyses the discourses taken up by supporters and opponents of these policies. Analysis suggests how discourses move across time and space, and focuses on how these discourses are contextualized and entextualized in social media, interaction, and public texts. The paper contributes to our knowledge of a major, but understudied, US education policy movement, and provides insights into how similar discourses are variably taken up by political actors for divergent ends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. 'The Trouble with Our Schools': a media construction of public discourses on Queensland schools.
- Author
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THOMAS, SUE
- Subjects
MASS media & education ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
This paper gives an account of competing public discourses on schooling. In particular, it investigates one newspaper's coverage of the release of an educational report. The paper combines interview data with a critical discourse analysis of newspaper texts to show how media reporting of Queensland schools constructed a preferred discourse on education that represented schools as being in crisis, 'in trouble'. The analysis describes how the paper shaped popular opinion on educational policy through the construction of public discourses of crisis in education. Further, the analysis shows how this discourse positioned particular groups as the authoritative voice on standards in Queensland schools. It shows how, at a time when teacher quality was under question, the media constructed a public discourse that diminished the authority of teachers to speak about education policy, granting that authority to the newspaper's editor, who assumed the people's voice on educational issues. This analysis of the construction of public discourses about education policy gives insights into the media's place in educational policy-making. In so doing, the paper adds to the small body of literature that investigates the relationships between the media and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Constructing a global education hub: the unlikely case of Manila.
- Author
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Ortiga, Yasmin Y.
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CURRICULUM planning ,EDUCATION & globalization ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
This paper investigates the creation of an unlikely education hub in Manila, Philippines, where local institutions have seen a growing number of international students from Korea, India, and the Middle East. These students seek qualifications in professions where Filipino migrants are highly represented, either to gain an advantage within their home countries or as a steppingstone towards jobs elsewhere. Drawing from current debates on 'global cities', this paper discusses how different actors promote Manila as an ideal destination for students by using the country's unique position within the global market for migrant labor and its American colonial history. Here, Filipino school owners and state officials market Philippine universities as the best venue to train for jobs found anywhere in the world. Such strategies target less privileged students unable to access more prestigious universities. creating new forms of knowledge mobility in an increasingly segmented higher education market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. ‘Life’ and education policy: intervention, augmentation and computation.
- Author
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Gulson, Kalervo N. and Webb, P. Taylor
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,BIOPOLITICS (Sociobiology) ,DATA science ,SCHOOLS ,NETWORK governance - Abstract
In this paper, we are interested in the notion of multiple ways of thinking, knowing and transforming life, namely an increasing capacity to intervene in ‘life’ as a ‘molecular biopolitics’, and the changing ways in which ‘life’ can be understood computationally. We identify and speculate on the ways different ideas of life, drawing from humanities, social, life and computing sciences, may impact the ways we think about and know education policy. We focus on key aspects of education policy around self-responsibilisation and choice, new forms of network governance and the move to education data science. The paper examines what is required to understand how advancements in the life and computing sciences may be implemented within educational institutions and organisations, and what political and ethical issues might pertain to the challenges these new advancements bring to educational institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Public narratives under intensified market conditions: Chile as a critical case.
- Author
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Santori, Diego
- Subjects
NARRATION ,NATIVE language ,DISCURSIVE practices ,NEWSPAPERS ,MUTUAL intelligibility of modern languages ,NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
This paper aims to extend existing theorisations around the notion of public narratives by analysing their regulatory effects under intensified market conditions. My analysis suggests that public narratives constitute a liminal space, one that it is not exclusively real or imaginary, factual or normative, but that simultaneously affects and is affected by vernacular practices and wider discursive structures. However, this paper argues that, under extreme conditions, these public narratives become a rigidifying space with homogenising/normalising effects. To do this I look at a set of ‘obligatory scenes’ captured in tales of success and struggle of teachers, parents and students in popular newspapers and fringe media in Chile. These accounts share a common ground: national assessment as a framework of intelligibility for the practices of parents, teachers and students. The central claim of this paper is that under intensified market conditions the scenes captured in these publicly available stories become ‘obligatory’ storylines, and their protagonists idealised policy subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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18. Attending to 'culture' in intercultural language learning: a study of Indonesian language teachers in Australia.
- Author
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Naidu, Kate
- Subjects
LANGUAGE teachers ,FOREIGN language education ,INDONESIAN language ,EDUCATION policy ,STAGE adaptations - Abstract
In recent decades, the field of language teaching has been increasingly recognised as having an important role in developing not only linguistic proficiency, but also a kind of 'interculturality' among students. Despite this 'intercultural turn' being evident in academic and policy documents, language teachers are at varying stages in their adaptation to such an approach. This paper draws on empirical data from a small-scale study conducted with teachers of Indonesian in Australian schools, to elucidate teachers' understandings of their role as 'intercultural' educators. In particular, the notion of 'culture' is examined, and the ways it is deployed around ideas of 'intercultural understanding' and language teaching pedagogy. This paper argues that despite the prevalence of 'interculturality' in educational policy, and a prevailing 'intercultural ethos' amongst teachers, confusion persists around the foundational idea of 'culture', which may affect teaching philosophy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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19. Buzzwords, blends and branding: marketing meets education policyspeak.
- Author
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McKeon, Kerry
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION marketing , *BRANDING (Marketing) , *MARKETING education , *FRAMES (Linguistics) , *DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
Through discourse analysis, this article explores strategies used in the speeches and public statements of former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos (2017–2020), as she employed marketing tactics in service of a neoliberal educational agenda. I identify DeVos’s framing and lexical choices deployed to increase memory and attention salience, thereby highlighting the role words play in shaping political and cultural outcomes. Although the paper provides only a snapshot of DeVos’s framing, the discussion is situated within a broader neoliberal discourse designed to manipulate public sense-making and trigger emotions through emotionally charged rhetoric. Through careful lexical choices, DeVos crafts a worldview for primary and secondary audiences that likewise informs macro-level educational narratives, policies, and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The emergence of the quantified child.
- Author
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Smith, Rebecca
- Subjects
HISTORY of education ,SOCIOLOGY ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL anthropology ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Using document analysis, this paper examines the historical emergence of the quantified child, revealing how the collection and use of data has become normalized through legitimizing discourses. First, following in the traditions of Foucault's genealogy and studies examining the sociology of numbers, this paper traces the evolution of data collection in a range of significant education policy documents. Second, a word count analysis was used to further substantiate the claim that data collection and use has been increasingly normalized through legitimizing discourses and routine actions in educational settings. These analyses provide evidence that the need to quantify educational practices has been justified over long periods of time through a variety of documents and that the extent to which data governs educators’ thoughts, discourses, and actions has dramatically increased during the past century. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Clarifying and reframing the neoliberal critique of educational policy using policy process theories.
- Author
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Ertas, Nevbahar and McKnight, Andrew N.
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATION policy ,ADVOCACY coalition framework ,THEORY ,EDUCATION & globalization ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
This paper explores the vocabulary and frameworks offered by two theories of public policy process: the advocacy coalition framework (ACF) and the narrative policy framework (NPF) and what they offer to the study of global education reform. The foci of ACF are policy subsystems, formation of advocacy coalitions around policy issues, and their impact on policy change; the emphasis of NPF is the divergent narratives developed and used by these coalitions. This paper reviews each theoretical framework, summarizes existing research literature on their education policy applications, and then poses alternative questions and suggest alternatives to study global education policies, especially those presently critiqued using the term neoliberal which we position as nebulous in its current usage. The aim is to open channels of communication for scholars from different disciplines by introducing different theoretical approaches to analyse the role of the numerous elements that shape global education policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Practice chains of production and consumption: mediatized practices across social fields.
- Author
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Rawolle, Shaun
- Subjects
SCHOLARSHIPS ,ENDOWMENT of research ,EDUCATION policy ,ACADEMIC etiquette ,STUDENT loans ,COOPERATIVE education ,RESEARCH grants ,EDUCATIONAL vouchers - Abstract
The argument developed in this paper is that a focus on practice provides some resolutions to methodological problems facing Bourdieuian scholarship in education. In order to develop Bourdieu's work on practice to account for the interactions between practices, this paper presents a conceptualization of practice as chains of production and consumption. The first part of the paper reviews the account of practice offered by Bourdieu both embedded in practice games and as field effects. The second part of the paper introduces practice chains of production and consumption as a way to conceptualize practice by drawing on a case involving print journalists' involvement with policy makers over the course of an Australian policy review. The final section presents a discussion of this conceptualization and highlights the potential of the concept for further research in understanding the processes of educational policy development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Re-conceptualising the paradox in policy implementation: a post-modernist conceptual approach.
- Author
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Nudzor, HopePius
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,POSTMODERNISM & education ,POWER (Social sciences) ,LANGUAGE & languages ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,POLITICAL philosophy ,EDUCATION research - Abstract
A review of education policy and practice indicates a paradox in policy implementation. Policy outcomes most often differ significantly from intended purposes and provisions enacted. This paper re-conceptualises this policy phenomenon, drawing on the post-modernist conception of policy as both 'text' and 'discourse' as an approach for understanding and unmasking the messiness and contested nature of education policy processes. The choice of approach is based on three factors. First, the choice is grounded in its efficacy in explicating and legitimatising the issues of power within the policy arena. Second, the choice is based on the potential of the approach in integrating social and political theories of discourse with more linguistically oriented approaches to the study of policy. Third, the preference of approach follows from its potential to draw on language as a resource for reading into and/or analysing complex social issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A White Veneer: Education policy, space and “race” in the inner city.
- Author
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Gulson, Kalervo
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL sociology ,URBAN sociology ,URBAN policy ,EDUCATION policy ,CURRICULUM change ,EDUCATION & politics ,CURRICULUM frameworks - Abstract
This paper explores how neo-liberal education policy change and urban renewal in inner Sydney and London has interacted with “raced” and classed educational identities. I draw on two examples of policy change, the Building the Future policy development in the inner city area of Sydney and the “Excellence in Cities” partnership programme in East London. The paper outlines, and applies, a spatial education policy sociology framework to explore the interplay of space, place, “race” and education policy. This paper suggests that in inner Sydney and London “whiteness” as a racial construct is present but noticeably absent and that this absent presence creates a “white veneer” around educational policy change and urban renewal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. 'Doing great things for the world': merit and the justice politics of young people receiving an elite educational scholarship.
- Author
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Charles, Claire, Black, Rosalyn, and Keddie, Amanda
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,SCHOLARSHIPS ,PRIVILEGE (Social sciences) ,SOCIAL background ,VIRTUES ,HIGHER education ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Higher Education policy researchers have highlighted the link between merit and privileged social background with respect to who is most likely to win merit-based scholarships in Universities. Yet little is known about how students from various social backgrounds may inhabit such a scholarship. In this paper, we draw on theorisations of the relationship between meritocracy and justice in order to analyse the subjective work of several undergraduate students who are positioned as winners in a meritocracy, due to being recipients of a generous merit-based scholarship. We explore the different techniques these students use to justify their access to privilege, unpacking their notions of justice, and consider them in relation to their social backgrounds. We argue that recognising their distinct constructions of merit and justice can help advance understanding of how the logics of meritocracy are (re)made in the context of University merit scholarships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Negotiating and contesting ‘success’: discourses of aspiration in a UK secondary school.
- Author
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Spohrer, Konstanze
- Subjects
DISCOURSE ,SUCCESS ,EDUCATION policy ,DISCOURSE analysis ,CONNECTED discourse - Abstract
The need to ‘raise aspirations’ among young people from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds has been prominent in UK policy debates over the last decade. This paper examines how this discourse is negotiated and contested by teachers and pupils in a Scottish secondary school. Interviews, group discussions and observations were analysed by drawing on Foucauldian discourse analysis. The analysis exposes contradictions and silences inherent in dominant discourses of aspiration, most notably the tension between the promise and the impossibility of ‘success’ for all. It is argued that attempts to reconcile this tension by calling on young people to maximise individual ‘potential’ through attitude change silence the social construction of ‘success’ and ‘failure’. The paper concludes with suggesting ways in which schools could embrace the contradictions underpinning dominant ‘raising aspiration’ discourses and adopt a more critical-sociological approach in working with young people. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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27. Lost in translation? Polycentricity and the mutation of concepts across fields.
- Author
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Savage, Glenn C. and Dang, Thi Kim Anh
- Subjects
POLITICAL science ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research - Abstract
This paper explores the emergence of the term 'polycentricity' in education policy research and compares its use in education to its historical use in its 'parent fields' of political science and economics. We focus on the leading role of Stephen Ball and colleagues in popularising the term in education, inspiring other education scholars to harness the term to examine contemporary governance arrangements. Our primary argument is that in broad descriptive terms, the use of the term in education generally mirrors its use in political science and economics. Its prescriptive usage, however, is very different, with arguments about the impacts of polycentricity in education policy often contrasting sharply with arguments in political science and economics. This has resulted, we argue, in core elements of the concept being 'lost in translation'. Yet, at the same time, its use in education has also generated new and important critical insights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The medicalization of current educational research and its effects on education policy and school reforms.
- Author
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Tröhler, Daniel
- Subjects
EDUCATION research ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,MEDICALIZATION ,SOCIAL problems - Abstract
This paper starts from the assumption of the emergence of an educationalized culture over the last 200 years according to which perceived social problems are translated into educational challenges. As a result, both educational institutions and educational research grew, and educational policy resulted from negotiations between professionals, researchers, and policy makers. The paper argues that specific experiences in the Second World War triggered a fundamental shift in the social and cultural role of academia, leading up to a technocratic culture characterized by confidence in experts rather than in practicing professionals (i.e., teachers and administrators). In this technocratic shift, first a technological system of reasoning emerged, and it was then replaced by a medical “paradigm.” The new paradigm led to a medicalization of social research, in which a particular organistic understanding of the social reality is taken for granted and research is conducted under the mostly undiscussed premises of this particular understanding. The result is that despite the increased importance of research in general, this expertocratic and medical shift of social research led to a massive reduction in reform opportunities by depriving the reform stakeholders of a broad range of education research, professional experience, common sense, and political deliberation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Seeing education with one's own eyes and through PISA lenses: considerations of the reception of PISA in European countries.
- Author
-
Carvalho, Luís Miguel and Costa, Estela
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The paper addresses the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development'sProgram for International Student Assessment(PISA) as a public policy instrument, whose worldwide circulation is mediated by processes of reinterpretation, negotiation, and re-contextualization, where national, local, and international agencies intertwine. It is focused on the active reception of PISA in six European spaces (Francophone Belgium, France, Hungary, Portugal, Romania, and Scotland) along its first three cycles. The paper identifies two contrasting developments: the Program's divergent uses and its attractiveness in different social worlds. The paper gives particular attention to what is called the ‘update of reference societies’ in the context of national receptions of PISA. These ‘updates’ are analyzed as part of a composite process that involves domestic reasons, either related to current agendas for education or to deep historical factors, and injunctions related to PISA's rationale and PISA objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Democracy, ‘sector-blindness’ and the delegitimation of dissent in neoliberal education policy: a response to Discourse 34(2), May 2013.
- Author
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Morsy, Leila, Gulson, Kalervo, and Clarke, Matthew
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,NEOLIBERALISM ,AUXILIARY sciences of history ,EDUCATION & politics - Abstract
As a response to the 2013 special issue ofDiscourseon marketisation and equity in education, this paper suggests it is important to understand how school sectors (independent, Catholic and government) continue to play a significant role in how we constitute education, markets and equity in Australia. The first part of this paper provides a genealogy of school funding in Australia, giving an overview of how Australia has reached the current state of ‘sector-blind’ school funding. We also focus on the shift in Australian schooling from a public good for national collective well-being to a private, positional good for individual advancement. The second part of the paper suggests that the notion of ‘sector-blindness’ is part of a depoliticisation of educational politics. We work from the premise that education is always and everywhere already a political project. We critique some absences in the special issue around ‘colour-blindness’ and in a coda to the paper, we provide the basis for renewing and politicising the debate about education policy by offering a ‘debate-redux’, that provides some possibilities about forms of democratic politics and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Discourses of teacher quality in the Australian print media 2014–2017: a corpus-assisted analysis.
- Author
-
Mockler, Nicole
- Subjects
TEACHER effectiveness ,EDUCATIONAL accountability ,EFFECTIVE teaching ,HIGH school teachers ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,POLITICAL accountability - Abstract
Discourses of 'teacher quality' have been on the rise in Australia since at least the standards-focused policy reforms of the 1990s. This paper uses a corpus-assisted analysis to explore recent deployments of 'teacher quality' and 'teaching quality' in the Australian print media, drawing on 432 articles collected from the 12 Australian national and capital city daily newspapers over the four-year period from January 2014 to December 2017. The analysis highlights that 'teacher quality' and 'teaching quality' are deployed differently in respect to school teachers and teachers in higher/vocational education contexts, and examines the nature of these differences. It demonstrates that the print media plays a key role in shaping and/or reflecting the links between discourses of teacher quality and notions of standards and accountability in education; and also in reflecting the highly politicised and political nature of teacher quality discussions and debates in Australia at this time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Governing through parents: a genealogical enquiry of education policy and the construction of neoliberal subjectivities in England.
- Author
-
Olmedo, Antonio and Wilkins, Andrew
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,NEOLIBERALISM ,POLICY discourse ,FREE schools ,KEYNESIAN economics - Abstract
In this paper we explore the various spaces and sites through which the figure of the parent is summoned to inhabit and perform market norms and practices in the field of education in England. Since the late 1970s successive governments have called on parents to enact certain duties and obligations in relation to the state. These duties include adopting and internalizing responsibility for all kinds of risks, liabilities and inequities formerly managed by the Keynesian welfare state. In this paper we examine how English parents are compelled to embody certain market norms and practices as they navigate the field of education. Adopting genealogical enquiry and policy discourse analysis as our methodology, we explore how parents across three policy sites or spaces are constructed as objects and purveyors of utility and ancillaries to marketization. This includes a focus on how parents are summoned as (1) consumers or choosers of education services; (2) governors and overseers of schools and (3) producers and founders of schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Working within and against the grain of policy in an alternative school.
- Author
-
Riddle, Stewart and Cleaver, David
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,NEOLIBERALISM ,ALTERNATIVE schools ,CRITICAL pedagogy ,SOCIAL justice - Abstract
This paper investigates the ways that teachers in one alternative school blur the boundaries of the political, personal, and philosophical in their efforts to re-engage marginalised and disenfranchised young people. The labours of the school staff at Harmony High offer an intriguing narrative of working both within and against the grain of policy mandates, curriculum narrowing, and the pervasive effects of neoliberalism. Through the physical and social spatiality, critical pedagogical and affective engagement of learners, new schooling assemblages might be formed. The work being done by teachers in alternative schooling contexts such as that of Harmony High – while situated, meaningful and deeply contextualised – offers hope for reconstituting mainstream education in more socially just ways that serve the needs and interests of everybody. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Understanding equity as an asset to national interest: developing a social contract analysis of policy.
- Author
-
Rawolle, Shaun
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,SOCIAL contract ,SOCIAL change ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Alongside the influence of market-based reforms in education policy has been the growth of policy that has largely been overlooked – those that outline social contracts. This paper draws on policies that connect with equity as a way of illustrating this social contract turn in policy and develops a conceptualisation of social contracts as they apply to education policy. The argument provides three principles that underpin social contracts, including informed consent, negotiation and accountability. This paper applies these principles to three levels of social contract. At the first level are broad social contracts, which are associated with debates about the kinds of things that states should expect from its citizens, and the things that citizens could expect from governments and the state. The second level of social contract is an institutional or field-based social contract, which spells out the obligations and connections between a specific field and other fields. This level names a kind of social contract that is often exemplified in policies or statements by specific institutions. The third level of social contract deals with contract-like mechanisms embedded in fields that make tangible the obligations and expectations of citizens in fulfilling the expectations of fields. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Equity, markets and the politics of aspiration in Australian higher education.
- Author
-
Sellar, Sam
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,HIGHER education ,WORKING class ,STUDENT aspirations ,LABOR market ,GLOBALIZATION - Abstract
This paper provides a critical discussion of contemporary policy agendas to raise aspirations for university study among students from low socio-economic status (SES) backgrounds. It traces the politics of aspiration from the working class ‘poverty of desire’ thesis propounded by British socialists at the turn of the twentieth century to recent concerns about the educational aspirations of low SES groups. These concerns are manifest in the current aspiration-raising agenda in Australian higher education, which aims to realise equity objectives by cultivating market-rational behaviour and dispositions to maximise self-investment in human capital. However, changes in contemporary global education and labour markets present significant obstacles to the ‘good life’ promises made by advocates of human capital theory, and even when these promises are realised, deficit constructions of aspirations persist. The paper identifies a tension in aspiration-raising logics between (1) human capital promises of economic rewards for enterprising behaviour and (2) the policing of aspirations and associated behaviours according to dominant social values. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. My School , My Market.
- Author
-
Gorur, Radhika
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research ,TRANSLATIONS ,CHARTER schools - Abstract
Australia's Education Revolution, launched in 2008, emphasised equity as a key reason for reforms. It identified ‘pockets of disadvantage’ as one of the main problems that needed to be addressed through its reforms. Through a series of translations, the problem of ‘pockets of disadvantage’ was converted to one of a lack of information, a lack of comparable metrics and the absence of an informed public, leading to a number of solutions such as the development of a national assessment scheme and theMy Schoolwebsite. In this paper, using the theoretical and methodological resources of actor-network theory, I argue that these translations were also, simultaneously, the processes by which the Australian education space was further ‘marketised’. These marketisation processes involved homogenisation, whereby schools were rendered comparable through the development of common evaluation and common metrics; the development of informational resources that enabled parents to function as economic agents and exert ‘market forces’; and coordinating the activities of the actors through theMy Schoolwebsite. The paper concludes with a discussion of how such descriptive analyses might serve as critique. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Policy enactments in schools introduction: towards a toolbox for theory and research.
- Author
-
Braun, Annette, Ball, StephenJ., and Maguire, Meg
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,GOVERNMENT policy on schools ,SCHOOL administration - Abstract
An introduction to the special issue of the journal regarding enactment of policies in schools is presented in which the authors discuss various topics of four papers including standard policies, the Pupil Learning and Thinking Skills (PLTS), and the dimension of the texts of policies in artefacts and visuals.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Neoliberal governmentality, schooling and the city: conceptual and empirical notes on and from the Global South.
- Author
-
Gulson, KalervoN. and Fataar, Aslam
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATION policy ,DISCRIMINATION in education ,URBAN policy ,POST-apartheid era ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper applies ideas that emanate from the Global North, concerning neoliberalism and neoliberal governmentality, to the case of marketisation in South Africa. It also attends to the limits of Northern ideas that are both intellectual undertakings and policy manifestations. In the first part of the paper, we identify how rationales for school choice, many of which have been introduced in countries like England, the USA, and Australia, have also been introduced in post-apartheid South Africa. Despite the introduction of markets to address apartheid era racial segregation, we suggest that in South Africa marketisation operates as part of racial neoliberalism. In the second part of the paper we explore in more detail how neoliberal governmentality operates in relation to education policy more generally, and specifically in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Neoliberalism, cities and education in the Global South/North.
- Author
-
Gulson, KalervoN. and Pedroni, ThomasC.
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The article discusses various reports published within the issue including one on impact of educational marketization on the practices and projects of cities, one on the identification of the cultural politics in neoliberalism and another one on the neoliberal forms of globalization in education in the Global North and South.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Education and nationalism: the discourse of education policy in Scotland.
- Author
-
Arnott, Margaret and Ozga, Jenny
- Subjects
DISCOURSE analysis ,EDUCATION ,ELECTIONS ,DEMOCRACY ,EDUCATION policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GLOBAL studies - Abstract
The paper draws on critical discourse analysis to examine and discuss some of the key developments in the governing of education in Scotland since the election of the Scottish National Party (SNP) government in May 2007. It analyses these developments, drawing on a study of key policy texts and suggests that discourse analysis has much to contribute to the understanding of the governing strategy of the minority SNP administration as reflected in its education policy. We suggest that there is a self-conscious strategy of 'crafting the narrative' of government that seeks to discursively re-position 'smarter Scotland' alongside small, social democratic states within the wider context of transnational pressures for conformity with global policy agendas. Thus the paper connects to current debates on the relationship between an emergent global education policy 'field' and the capacity of 'local' contexts to develop and sustain particular, embedded assumptions and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Prophets, pastors and profiteering: exploring external providers' enactment of pastoral power in school wellbeing programs.
- Author
-
McCuaig, Louise, Woolcock, Liz, Stylianou, Michalis, Ng, Johan Y.Y., and Ha, Amy S.
- Subjects
PASTORAL societies ,EDUCATION policy ,PARENT-teacher relationships ,PROPHETS ,SCHOOLS ,RESPONSIBILITY - Abstract
This paper explores the governance practices that external providers of school wellbeing programs employ in their contribution to the subjectification function of education. In neoliberal times where this 'game' of subjectification has become more open, governmentality scholars have been challenged to provide more robust insight into how discourses permeate individual subjectivities. In response, we draw on recent theorising of Foucault's pastoral power concept and a resulting analytic framework of four interlinked practices to explore external providers' endeavours to 'shepherd' students, teachers and parents in the practices and responsibilities of personal wellbeing. Our data revealed that discourse tension and conflict emerges within school communities' increasingly 'messy' pastoral terrain. In conclusion, we suggest that more empirical and theoretical insight into actors' resistance and agency within the pastoral power landscape of schools offers a vital contribution to our understanding of external providers' influence on education policy and enactment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Defining diversity: a critical discourse analysis of public educational texts.
- Author
-
Arce-Trigatti, Andrea and Anderson, Ashlee
- Subjects
CRITICAL discourse analysis ,EDUCATION ministers ,CULTURAL studies ,DIVERSITY in education - Abstract
With this paper we present findings from a cultural studies project that aims to illuminate and define the various, sometimes overlapping, conceptions of diversity in public educational discourses. We do so via a critical discourse analysis of select political texts: namely speeches by former Secretary of Education Arne Duncan that reference diversity as a focal point of intervention and reform (national and international in scope). We begin with a general overview of literature outlining diversity's historical links to the education sector, after which we describe our theoretical framework, data sources, and methodology. Next, we present the study's findings through the lens of two paramount themes: diversity as an economic input and diversity as a democratic input. To conclude, we provide discussions based on these findings, point to an overall lack of effort regarding the meaningful implementation of diversity policies, and suggest potential avenues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Diversity, Inequality, and a Post-structural Politics for Education.
- Author
-
Youdell, Deborah
- Subjects
EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL attitudes ,THEORY ,MULTICULTURAL education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper considers the contribution to understanding educational inequalities offered by post-structural theories of power and the subject. The paper locates this consideration in the context of the ongoing endeavour in education studies to make sense of, and identify ways of interrupting, abiding educational exclusions and inequalities. The paper examines the potential of Judith Butler's work, in particular her engagement with Foucault's concepts of productive power and subjectivation, and the articulation of these ideas with the notion of the performative constitution of subjects, for making sense of the processes through which students come to be particular sorts of subjects of schooling. The paper argues that taking up these understandings not only enables us to better understand the endurance of particular configurations of educational inequalities, it also opens up new possibilities for interrupting these through a post-structural politics that seeks to displace prevailing discourses and constitute students differently through everyday practices of preformative reinscription. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Realising Policy: the who and how of policy production.
- Author
-
GALE, TREVOR
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATION policy ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
This paper identifies a number of strategies employed by policy actors in the production of Australian higher education entry policy during the period 1987 to 1996, with a particular focus on the production of Queensland higher education entry policy text in 1990 (Viviani, 1990, The Review of Tertiary Entrance in Queensland, 1990, Department of Education, Queensland). The paper begins from the premise that while policy is often intended to be read as if spoken with a single voice, suggesting rational debate and (then) consensus among policy producers, it is more cogently understood as the product of struggle and conflict. Informed by 27 semi-structured interviews with politicians, political advisers, bureaucrats, academics, institutional administrators and independent authorities, the paper addresses the temporary settling of these actors' struggles and conflicts in contexts of policy making through strategies of negotiation. Rather than providing a sequential account of higher education policy that weaves its way through these negotiations, as grand narrative, the paper is more sporadic in its representations of strategies, identifying them in 'local' and specific knowledges and practices. Drawing on Foucault, what emerges is both an archaeology and genealogy of policy production (Gale, 2001, Journal of Education Policy, 16(5), pp. 379-393). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. What Counts as 'Success'? Hierarchical discourses in a girls' comprehensive school.
- Author
-
BENJAMIN, SHEREEN
- Subjects
BRITISH education system ,INCLUSIVE education ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION - Abstract
In the UK, as in many parts of the world, educational policy is dominated by the 'standards agenda': the top-down drive to improve students' performance in examinations. Simultaneously, there is policy emphasis on (differing versions of) 'inclusive education', and mainstream schools are exhorted to remove barriers to learning and participation for students who would until recently have been educated separately in special schools. This paper examines one of the many tensions between these two policy imperatives. Using findings from an ethnographic study in one comprehensive girls' school in an English city, I identify three distinct versions of educational 'success'-'dominant', 'consolation' and 'really disabled'. This paper explores how students identified as having 'special educational needs' position themselves and are positioned by the three discourses, and suggests that the hierarchisation of what can count as 'success' is an important dimension in the enduring reproduction of educational and societal inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Faith-Based Schooling and the Invisible Effects of 11 September 2001: the view from England.
- Subjects
SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The specific problematic of this paper is the effects of the events of 11 September on English education policy, particularly policy surrounding faith schooling. One story to be told is one of an absence of effect, of policy discussions and directions continuing on the same trajectory before and after that date, a story of 'no U-turn'. However, this article presents an alternative account that recognizes important effects, but effects that have largely remained below the surface. The central focus of the paper is the symbolic power of 11 September operating around an axis of destabilization. It is argued that the event symbolizes a disruption of myths of urban order and of the 'safe' accommodations between modernity and postmodernity; and that there has been an analogous impact on the myth of liberalism as the all-encompassing voice of reason and civilization. '11 September', it is suggested, serves as a potent reminder of the fundamental tensions in models of liberal education, evident, in particular, in the paradox of 'liberal imperialism'. It can thus be effectively mobilized in policy discussions by either regressive or progressive thinkers. The paper draws attention to the way in which these tensions and mobilization practices can be seen behind current English policy debates on faith schooling. It concludes that intensified public anxieties about 'Osama Bin Laden academies' fundamentally undermining 'our way of life' have not coalesced into anything 'measurable'; but that the lack of a U-turn by New Labour on the faith schooling issue could be understood as an important 'intervention' designed to act as one stabilizing message in destabilized times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Angry Anglos and aspirational Asians: everyday multiculturalism in the selective school system in Sydney.
- Author
-
Ho, Christina
- Subjects
MULTICULTURALISM ,SCHOOL districts ,PARENTING ,ACADEMIC achievement ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
'Asian whiz kids' perfect test scores.' 'Selective schools and tiger parents.' These types of headlines highlight the increased visibility of academically successful students from Asian migrant backgrounds, in Australia and other Western countries. They also point to anxiety about the perceived aggressive 'tiger' parenting often associated with Asian academic success. This paper focuses on the forms of everyday multiculturalism found in and around high-performing selective schools and classes in Sydney, Australia, almost all of which are dominated by Asian-Australian students. Drawing on interviews with parents and students from Anglo- and Asian-Australian backgrounds, it documents the different positionalities adopted by participants within these culturally diverse settings, including anger, aspiration and cosmopolitanism. This potentially volatile combination of approaches to diversity reveals some of the social consequences of neoliberal migration and education policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The enactment of professional learning policies: performativity and multiple ontologies.
- Author
-
Riveros, Augusto and Viczko, Melody
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,TEACHER development ,ONTOLOGY ,PERFORMATIVE (Philosophy) ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
While teacher learning has become a locus of school reform across many international settings, there is relatively little examination of the idiosyncratic ways in which policy discourses on teacher learning are enacted in schools. In this paper, we aim to investigate how these policy discourses are translated and configured into practices and thus, enacted into concrete realities. Using the conceptual notion ofmultiple ontologies, we argue that teacher learning is actualized in a multiplicity of socio-material entanglements, not as a single reality, but as a multiplicity of realities that coexist, simultaneously, in the mesh of assemblages that we call “school.” In this study, we describe and trace how particular socio-material configurations of teacher learning produce concrete realities of practice that mobilize and generate specific networked effects. We conclude that the postulation of multiple ontologies of teacher learning prompts a shift in how policy makers could conceive of and develop strategies aimed at transforming teaching practices. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Producing calculable worlds: education at a glance.
- Author
-
Gorur, Radhika
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,SCIENCE education ,TECHNOLOGY education ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The OECD's international education indicators have become very influential in contemporary education policies. Although these indicators are now routinely, annually published in the form ofEducation at a Glance, the calculability upon which the indicators depend was an achievement that involved the mobilisation of a huge machinery of expertise, trust, pragmatism and other resources. This paper traces the ways in which varied constraints were addressed, interests translated, categories defined, classifications negotiated, frameworks agreed upon, choices made, methodologies established and protocols developed, as the indicators exercise moved from being nearly impossible to becoming routinely produced. Using resources from Science and Technology Studies (STS), it demonstrates that the work of making such assemblages is both instrumentalist and performative, and argues for an undertaking of critique as a moral enterprise. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Discourses of the good parent in attributing school success.
- Author
-
Thomas, Sue, Keogh, Jayne, and Hay, Steve
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement ,PARENT participation in education ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,PARENT attitudes - Abstract
Recent education policy places a heavy emphasis on parents in relation to students' success at school. This paper explores how parents and teachers account for school success. Using membership categorisation analysis, it interrogates data collected in different interview situations across sites over a period of 20 years. The analysis shows how parents and teachers use talk as moral work to conversationally constitute particular agreed versions of the category ‘parent’. This category is interactively assembled through the use of category-bound attributes that construct deficit discourses of parents that explain student achievement. The analysis demonstrates that parents are complicit with teachers in producing versions of being a good parent wherein they are held responsible for their children's school success and that minimises the responsibility of the school. These findings raise questions both about who is responsible for schooling and about current contradictory policy emphases on parent and teacher responsibility for school success. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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