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Showing 46 to 60 of 165 results
Brunila, Kristiina – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
Education in Finland is facing new challenges in the form of two related trends: "therapisation" and "projectisation". The concept of therapisation describes the ways in which ideas, discourses and practices from counselling, therapy, psychiatry, educational and clinical psychology become internalised and normalised in education. Projectisation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Projects, Learning Activities, Active Learning
Aveling, Nado – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
This article raises the recurrent question whether non-indigenous researchers should attempt to research with/in Indigenous communities. If research is indeed a metaphor of colonization, then we have two choices: we have to learn to conduct research in ways that meet the needs of Indigenous communities and are non-exploitative, culturally…
Descriptors: Researchers, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Relevance, Research Methodology
Zembylas, Michalinos – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
This article critiques some of the existing literature in critical pedagogy and the way it tends to overlook or downplay the strong emotional investments of troubled knowledge in posttraumatic situations. Examining existing literature in critical pedagogy reiterates the argument that the discourse of critical pedagogy constructs and sustains its…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Trauma, Emotional Experience, Altruism
Le Phan, Ha – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
The English language is significant to the internationalisation of higher education worldwide. Countries in Asia are proactive in appropriating English for their national interests, while paying attention to associated national cultural identity issues. This article examines the ways in which the role of English is interpreted and justified in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Global Approach
Anh, Dang Thi Kim; Marginson, Simon – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
Vygotsky saw mental and cultural development as "mediated" by artefacts, including tools and signs. He used his "genetic method" to investigate higher cognitive processes in historical context. These insights are foundational to sociocultural theory, which is widely used in education research. However, since Vygotsky, communicative globalization…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Global Approach, English Teachers, English (Second Language)
Connell, Raewyn – Critical Studies in Education, 2013
Education has been powerfully affected by the rise of a neoliberal political, economic and cultural agenda. The Australian experience since the 1980s is outlined. Educators need to understand neoliberalism, and also to think about the nature of education itself, as a social process of nurturing capacities for practice. Education itself cannot be…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Free Enterprise System, Politics of Education, Access to Education
Keddie, Amanda; Niesche, Richard – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
Drawing on a broader study that focused on examining principal leadership for equity and diversity, this paper presents the leadership experiences of "Jane", a White, middle-class principal of a rural Indigenous school. The paper highlights how Jane's leadership is inextricably shaped by her assumptions about race and the political dynamics and…
Descriptors: Race, Indigenous Populations, Racial Relations, School Personnel
Osei-Kofi, Nana – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
In higher education today, an overwhelming acceptance of neoliberal and neoconservative ideologies that advance corporate logics of efficiency, competition and profit maximization is commonplace. Market-driven logics and neoconservative ideals shape decision-making about what is taught, how material is taught, who teaches, who does research, who…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Higher Education, Research Universities, Ideology
Mandated Literacy Assessment and the Reorganisation of Teachers' Work: Federal Policy, Local Effects
Comber, Barbara – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
This paper explores how mandated literacy assessment is reorganising teachers' work in the context of Australia's National Assessment Program--Literacy and Numeracy, which was implemented in 2008. Students in Years 3, 5, 7 and 9 are tested annually, with school results publicly available. The wider policy context and the emergence of different…
Descriptors: Testing, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, Literacy Education
Optimising Meritocratic Advantage with the International Baccalaureate Diploma in Australian Schools
Doherty, Catherine – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
This paper explores two of the tensions Tarc identifies in the history of the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma: firstly, between its design for meritocratic competition and its internationalist vision and, secondly, between the IB as a global commodity and its localised interpretations. Using data from three case studies of Australian…
Descriptors: Educational History, Competition, Local Government, Foreign Countries
Rowe, Emma E.; Windle, Joel – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
With the launch of the "My School" website in 2010, Australia became a relative latecomer to the publication of national school performance comparisons. This paper primarily seeks to explore the school choice experience as framed by "My School" website, for participating middle-class families. We will draw on Bourdieusian theory of cultural…
Descriptors: Middle Class, School Choice, Urban Areas, Foreign Countries
Wilkins, Andrew – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
In this paper I draw on ethnographic observation data taken from a school-based study of two groups of 12-13-year-old pupils identified as high achieving and popular to explore how relations between teachers and pupils are mediated and constituted through the spectre of neoliberal values and sensibilities--zero-sum thinking, individualism and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teacher Student Relationship, Citizenship, Females
Lambert, Cath – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
Jacques Ranciere remains neglected within educational debates. In this paper I examine the potential of his philosophies for enacting critical interventions in relation to contemporary (higher) educational concerns. Ranciere argues against the progressive temporality of pedagogic relations and provides an alternative thesis that equality is a…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Politics of Education, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
Tan, Charlene – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
This paper explores the culture of education policy making in Shanghai using the conceptual tool of a "global assemblage". A global assemblage is essentially a collection of ideas and practices that arise from the interplay between a global form and situated sociocultural elements. Focusing on the global form of curriculum reform, this paper…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, City Government, Educational Policy
Thomson, Pat; Lingard, Bob; Wrigley, Terry – Critical Studies in Education, 2012
This paper argues the need for new ideas to assist in the creation of a new social imaginary post-neo-liberalism to frame rethought educational systems, policy and schooling. This is an attempt to reclaim progressive, democratic and social justice purposes for schooling well beyond dominant human capital renditions. While acknowledging the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Human Capital, Educational Policy, Imagery

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