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Stuart, Margaret – Policy Futures in Education, 2022
This article examines a particular incident in the Waikato wars, 1863-4 and its relevance to the newly mandated New Zealand History curriculum. The new curriculum will for the first time make the teaching of local history compulsory in years 1-10. I examine the wide variety of submissions about the content of this curriculum. As the Royal…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Political Attitudes, Educational History, Indigenous Populations
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Stuart, Margaret – Policy Futures in Education, 2022
Educational leadership has become a prime focus in the past few decades. Margaret Stuart's thesis is that, as the New Zealand education reforms of the 1990s were bundled with neoliberal economics, the discourse of educational leadership ascended. The country is unique in that its devolution of educational management to individual schools, and an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, Neoliberalism, Economics
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Stuart, Margaret – Policy Futures in Education, 2020
An academic, Peter Dinniss, discussed the then emerging issue of professionalism in the early childhood education sector in 1974. "There has been much debate over the term ['professional'] together with discussion as to whether teaching is a profession" (1974: 11). On the cusp of the 21st century, the Education Council (now renamed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professionalism, Teaching (Occupation), Early Childhood Education
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Stuart, Margaret – Policy Futures in Education, 2019
Using Michel Foucault's theories of biopolitics, about risk and security, I examine the welfare policies of the National Coalition Government in New Zealand (2008-2017). This government attempted to mitigate risk by projecting possible challenges and solutions to 'vulnerable populations'. Welfare was re-defined in monetarist economic terms, as…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Public Policy, Security (Psychology), Disadvantaged