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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2016
This paper is both a careful analysis of a seminal piece of work in the sociology of education, as well as a passionate plea to revisit with renewed urgency, the way in which education continues to fail unacceptably large numbers of working-class children. Through closely examining the work of Dennis Marsden (with his colleague Brian Jackson) in…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Working Class, Failure, Social Class
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Smyth, John; Harrison, Tim – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2015
Australia is indicative of a country that is deeply confused and conflicted around a policy discourse of inclusion that is sutured within an existential context heavily committed to the tenets of neoliberalism. Nowhere is this more evident than in the case of higher education, in which the proportion of young people from backgrounds of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Disadvantaged Youth, Higher Education
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Smyth, John; McInerney, Peter – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This paper examines the complex constellation of conditions that turn many young people into "exiles" from schooling. From the vantage point of young people, the paper traces out a profile of the conditions that need to be brought into existence for these young people to find a way back into learning. The paper argues that current…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Environment, Quality of Life, Neoliberalism
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Down, Barry; Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This article examines the highly disputed policy nexus around what on the surface appears to be the helpful field of vocational education and training. Despite the promises of vocational education and training to deliver individual labour market success and global competitiveness, the reality is that it serves to residualise unacceptably large…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Young Adults, Vocational Education, Self Concept
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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2011
Sometimes an educational idea is inexplicably adopted around the world with remarkable speed and consistency and in the absence of a proper evidence base or with little regard or respect for teachers, students or learning. This paper examines what has arguably been the most contentious and virulent educational reform of the past half-century.…
Descriptors: Evidence, School Based Management, Educational Change, Public Education
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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2008
Australia has been one of the countries to most enthusiastically embrace the neo-liberal conditions conducive to the dismantling of equitably provided public schooling. The article argues that part of the explanation for the absence of any effective challenge to this trajectory lies in the contradictory nature of the Australian identity. The…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Private Education, Middle Class, School Choice
Smyth, John – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1989
The corporate management approach often promoted for college administration is criticized, and four major aspects of the approach considered antithetical to the collaborative ways of thinking and acting in educational organizations are examined: product orientation, instrumentalism, rationalization, and active intervention. Collegiality is…
Descriptors: Business Administration, College Administration, Collegiality, Comparative Analysis