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This volume offers a critical examination of the Programme for
International Students Assessment (PISA), focusing on its origins
and implementation, relationship to other international large-scale
assessments, and its impacts on educational policy and reform at
national and cross-national levels. Using empirical data gathered
from a research project carried out by the CeiED at Lusofona
University, Lisbon, the text highlights connections between PISA
and emergent issues including the international circulation of big
science, expertise and policy, and identifies its conceptual and
methodological limits as a global governance project. The volume
ultimately provides a novel framework for understanding how OECD
priorities are manifested through a regulatory instrument based on
Human and Knowledge Capital Theory, and so makes a powerful case to
search for new humanistic approaches. This text will benefit
researchers, academics and educators with an interest in education
policy and politics, international and comparative education, and
the sociology of education more broadly. Those interested in the
history of education will also benefit from this volume.
Documenting the outcomes from three decades of transnational
research conducted under the leadership of Antonio Teodoro, this
volume offers a robust scaffolding of the social and political
context in which global education is being challenged by the
contradictions of neoliberalism, globalization, deregulation,
governance, and democracy. Contesting the Global Development of
Sustainable and Inclusive Education presents outcomes from
transnational studies conducted in response to global policies
advocating the development of sustainable and inclusive education
for all. Chapters map the impacts of globalization on education
policy and consider how international organizations are shaping
national education reforms. Focusing on questions of social
justice, the volume asks how the neoliberal strategies enacted by
national governments are affecting the work of teachers as well as
curriculum, teacher training, and assessment. Finally, the text
asks whether there are alternatives to financially-driven,
competition-based reforms that might better position education as
an action project for social justice. This volume will be of
interest to postgraduate students, scholars, researchers and
policymakers in the fields of global education, comparative
education, and education policy.
Critique and utopia are two of the central concepts of the
sociology of education, and they indeed exemplify the critical
traditions in the sociology of education as a discipline. This book
analyzes, using theoretical frameworks and empirical data, the
state of the art of the sociology of education at the beginning of
the century, offering a systematic criticism of the dominant
theories, and findings in the sociology of education. Key chapters
focus on theoreticians who have made an impact in the discipline,
including Basil Bernstein, Pierre Bourdieu, Paulo Freire. Yet,
there is much more than theoretical analysis in this book. It also
offers insights for policy and practice in diverse areas of
education, including the formal, nonformal, and informal modalities
of educational praxis.
Critique and utopia are two of the central concepts of the
sociology of education, and they indeed exemplify the critical
traditions in the sociology of education as a discipline. This book
analyzes, using theoretical frameworks and empirical data, the
state of the art of the sociology of education at the beginning of
the century, offering a systematic criticism of the dominant
theories, and findings in the sociology of education. Key chapters
focus on theoreticians who have made an impact in the discipline,
including Basil Bernstein, Pierre Bourdieu, Paulo Freire. Yet,
there is much more than theoretical analysis in this book. It also
offers insights for policy and practice in diverse areas of
education, including the formal, nonformal, and informal modalities
of educational praxis.
Documenting the outcomes from three decades of transnational
research conducted under the leadership of Antonio Teodoro, this
volume offers a robust scaffolding of the social and political
context in which global education is being challenged by the
contradictions of neoliberalism, globalization, deregulation,
governance, and democracy. Contesting the Global Development of
Sustainable and Inclusive Education presents outcomes from
transnational studies conducted in response to global policies
advocating the development of sustainable and inclusive education
for all. Chapters map the impacts of globalization on education
policy and consider how international organizations are shaping
national education reforms. Focusing on questions of social
justice, the volume asks how the neoliberal strategies enacted by
national governments are affecting the work of teachers as well as
curriculum, teacher training, and assessment. Finally, the text
asks whether there are alternatives to financially-driven,
competition-based reforms that might better position education as
an action project for social justice. This volume will be of
interest to postgraduate students, scholars, researchers and
policymakers in the fields of global education, comparative
education, and education policy.
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