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At the time of Obama's draconian anti-immigrant policies leading to
massive deportation of undocumented, poor immigrants of colour,
there could not be a more timely and important book than this
edited volume, which critically examines ways in which immigration,
race, class, language, and gender issues intersect and impact the
life of many immigrants, including immigrant students. This book
documents the journey, many success-stories, as well as stories
that expose social inequity in schools and U.S. society. Further,
this book examines issues of social inequity and resource gaps
shaping the relations between affluent and poor-working class
students, including students of colour. Authors in this volume also
critically unpack anti-immigrant policies leading to the separation
of families and children. Equally important, contributors to this
book unveil ways and degree to which xenophobia and linguicism have
affected immigrants, including immigrant students and faculty of
colour, in both subtle and overt ways, and the manner in which many
have resisted these forms of oppression and affirmed their
humanity. Lastly, chapters in this much-needed and well-timed
volume have pointed out the way racism has limited life chances of
people of colour, including students of colour, preventing many of
them from fulfilling their potential succeeding in schools and
society at large.
A volume in Critical Constructions: Studies on Education and
Society Series Editor: Curry Stephenson Malott, Queens College/CUNY
Who should read this book? Anyone who is touched by public
education - teachers, administrators, teacher-educators, students,
parents, politicians, pundits, and citizens - ought to read this
book. It will speak to educators, policymakers and citizens who are
concerned about the future of education and its relation to a
robust, participatory democracy. The perspectives offered by a
wonderfully diverse collection of contributors provide a glimpse
into the complex, multilayered factors that shape, and are shaped
by, institutions of schooling today. The analyses presented in this
text are critical of how globalization and neoliberalism exert
increasing levels of control over the public institutions meant to
support the common good. Readers of this book will be well prepared
to participate in the dialogue that will influence the future of
public education in this nation - a dialogue that must seek the
kind of change that represents hope for all students. As for the
question contained in the title of the book--Can hope audaciously
trump neoliberalism?--, Carr and Porfilio develop a framework that
integrates the work of the contributors, including Christine
Sleeter and Dennis Carlson, who wrote the forward and afterword
respectively, that problematizes how the Obama administration has
presented an extremely constrained, conservative notion of change
in and through education. The rhetoric has not been matched by
meaningful, tangible, transformative proposals, policies and
programs aimed at transformative change. There are many reasons for
this, and, according to the contributors to this book, it is clear
that neoliberalism is a major obstacle to stimulating the hope that
so many have been hoping for. Addressing systemic inequities
embedded within neoliberalism, Carr and Porfilio argue, is key to
achieving the hope so brilliantly presented by Obama during the
campaign that brought him to the presidency.
Anyone who is touched by public education - teachers,
administrators, teacher-educators, students, parents, politicians,
pundits, and citizens - ought to read this book, a revamped and
updated second edition. It will speak to educators, policymakers
and citizens who are concerned about the future of education and
its relation to a robust, participatory democracy. The perspectives
offered by a wonderfully diverse collection of contributors provide
a glimpse into the complex, multilayered factors that shape, and
are shaped by, education institutions today. The analyses presented
in this text are critical of how globalization and neoliberalism
exert increasing levels of control over the public institutions
meant to support the common good. Readers of this book will be well
prepared to participate in the dialogue that will influence the
future of public education in United States, and beyond - a
dialogue that must seek the kind of change that represents hope for
all students. As for the question contained in the title of the
book - The Phenomenon of Obama and the Agenda for Education: Can
Hope (Still) Audaciously Trump Neoliberalism? (Second Edition) -,
Carr and Porfilio develop a framework that integrates the work of
the contributors, including Christine Sleeter and Dennis Carlson,
who wrote the original forward and afterword respectively, and the
updated ones written by Paul Street, Peter Mclaren and Dennis
Carlson, which problematize how the Obama administration has
presented an extremely constrained, conservative notion of change
in and through education. The rhetoric has not been matched by
meaningful, tangible, transformative proposals, policies and
programs aimed at transformative change, and now fully into a
second mandate this second edition of the book is able to more
substantively provide a vigorous critique of the contemporary
educational and political landscape. There are many reasons for
this, and, according to the contributors to this book, it is clear
that neoliberalism is a major obstacle to stimulating the hope that
so many have been hoping for. Addressing systemic inequities
embedded within neoliberalism, Carr and Porfilio argue, is key to
achieving the hope so brilliantly presented by Obama during the
campaign that brought him to the presidency.
A volume in Critical Constructions: Studies on Education and
Society Series Editor: Curry Stephenson Malott, Queens College/CUNY
This volume will be a valuable resource to instructors who teach in
the fields of teacher education, social studies, educational
leadership, social work, social, cultural and philosophical
foundations of education, sociology, political science, and global
studies as well as their students. Due to the volume's
international focus, we also expect that it will purchased by a
large number of university libraries, researchers, educators and
others in a number of countries.
The word fundamentalism usually conjures up images of religions and
their most zealous followers. Much less often the word appears in
connection with political economy. The phrase "free market" gives
the connotation that capitalism is freedom. Neoliberalism is the
rise of global free-market fundamentalism. It reaches into nearly
every aspect of our daily lives as it seeks to dominate and
eliminate the last vestiges of public domains through wanton
privatization and deregulation. It degrades all that is public. The
good news is that a global community of resistance continues to
struggle against neoliberal oppression. Formal and informal
education entities contribute to these struggles, offering visions
and strategies for creating a better future. The purpose of this
volume is twofold. Several contributors will highlight how the
neoliberal agenda is impacting educational policy formation,
teaching and learning, and relationships between institutions of
higher education and communities. Other contributors will highlight
how the global community has gradually become conscious of the
ideological doctrine and how it is responsible for human suffering
and misery. The volume is needed because the growing body of
educational research linked to exploring the impact of
neoliberalism on education and society fails to provide conceptual
or historical understanding of this ideology. It is also an
important scholarly intervention because it provides insights as to
why educators, scholars, and other global citizens have challenged
the intrusion of market forces over life inside universities and
colleges. Teaching faculty, research faculty, and anyone who yearns
to understand what is behind the debilitating trend of commercial
forces subverting humanizing educational projects would benefit
from this volume. Activists, educators, youth, and scholars who
seek strategies and visions for building democratic higher
education and a more democratic society would consider this volume
essential reading.
The word fundamentalism usually conjures up images of religions and
their most zealous followers. Much less often the word appears in
connection with political economy. The phrase "free market" gives
the connotation that capitalism is freedom. Neoliberalism is the
rise of global free-market fundamentalism. It reaches into nearly
every aspect of our daily lives as it seeks to dominate and
eliminate the last vestiges of public domains through wanton
privatization and deregulation. It degrades all that is public. The
good news is that a global community of resistance continues to
struggle against neoliberal oppression. Formal and informal
education entities contribute to these struggles, offering visions
and strategies for creating a better future.The purpose of this
volume is twofold. Several contributors will highlight how the
neoliberal agenda is impacting educational policy formation,
teaching and learning, and relationships between K-12 schools and
communities. Other contributors will highlight how the global
community has gradually become conscious of the ideological
doctrine and how it is responsible for human suffering and misery.
The volume is needed because the growing body of educational
research linked to exploring the impact of neoliberalism on schools
and society fails to provide conceptual or historical understanding
of this ideology. It is also an important scholarly intervention
because it provides insights as to why educators, scholars, and
other global citizens have challenged the intrusion of market
forces over life inside K-12 schools. Teacher educators,
schoolteachers, and anyone who yearns to understand what is behind
the debilitating trend of commercial forces subverting humanizing
educational projects would benefit from this volume. Activists,
educators, youth, and scholars who seek strategies and visions for
building democratic schools and a society would consider this
volume essential reading.
Killing the Model Minority Stereotype comprehensively explores the
complex permutations of the Asian model minority myth, exposing the
ways in which stereotypes of Asian/Americans operate in the service
of racism. Chapters include counter-narratives, critical analyses,
and transnational perspectives. This volume connects to overarching
projects of decolonization, which social justice educators and
practitioners will find useful for understanding how the model
minority myth functions to uphold white supremacy and how
complicity has a damaging impact in its perpetuation. The book adds
a timely contribution to the model minority discourse.
This edited volume contributes to a burgeoning field of critical
scholarship on the news media and education. This scholarship is
based on an understanding that the news media has increasingly
applied a neoliberal template that mediates knowledge and action
about education. This book calls into question what the public
knows about education, how the public is informed, and whose
interests are represented and ultimately served through the
production and distribution of information by the news media about
education. The chapters comprising this volume serve to enlighten
and call to action parents, students, educators, academics and
scholars, activists, and policymakers for social, political, and
economic transformation. Moreover, as the neoliberal agenda in
North America intensifies, the chapters in this book help to deepen
our understanding of the logics and processes of the neoliberal
privatization of education and the accompanying social discourses
that facilitate the reduction of social relations to a transaction
in the marketplace. The chapters examine the news media and the
reproduction of neoliberal educational reforms (A Nation at Risk,
Teach For America, charter schools, think tanks, and PISA) and
resistance to neoliberal educational reforms (online activism and
radical Black press) while also broadening our conceptual
understanding of the marketization and mediatization of educational
discourses. Overall, the book provides an in-depth understanding of
the neoliberal privatization of education by extending critical
examinations to this underrepresented field of cultural production:
the news media coverage of education. The contribution of this
edited volume, therefore, helps to build an understanding of the
contemporary dynamics of capital accumulation to inform public
resistance for social transformation.
Currently, both the status quo of public education and the "No
Excuses" Reform policies are identical. The reform offers a popular
and compelling narrative based on the meritocracy and rugged
individualism myths that are supposed to define American idealism.
This volume will refute this ideology by proposing Social Context
Reform, a term coined by Paul Thomas which argues for educational
change within a larger plan to reform social inequity-such as
access to health care, food, higher employment, better wages and
job security. Since the accountability era in the early 1980s,
policy, public discourse, media coverage, and scholarly works have
focused primarily on reforming schools themselves. Here, the
evidence that school-only reform does not work is combined with a
bold argument to expand the discourse and policy surrounding
education reform to include how social, school, and classroom
reform must work in unison to achieve goals of democracy, equity,
and opportunity both in and through public education. This volume
will include a wide variety of essays from leading critical
scholars addressing the complex elements of social context reform,
all of which address the need to re-conceptualize accountability
and to seek equity and opportunity in social and education reform.
Currently, both the status quo of public education and the "No
Excuses" Reform policies are identical. The reform offers a popular
and compelling narrative based on the meritocracy and rugged
individualism myths that are supposed to define American idealism.
This volume will refute this ideology by proposing Social Context
Reform, a term coined by Paul Thomas which argues for educational
change within a larger plan to reform social inequity-such as
access to health care, food, higher employment, better wages and
job security. Since the accountability era in the early 1980s,
policy, public discourse, media coverage, and scholarly works have
focused primarily on reforming schools themselves. Here, the
evidence that school-only reform does not work is combined with a
bold argument to expand the discourse and policy surrounding
education reform to include how social, school, and classroom
reform must work in unison to achieve goals of democracy, equity,
and opportunity both in and through public education. This volume
will include a wide variety of essays from leading critical
scholars addressing the complex elements of social context reform,
all of which address the need to re-conceptualize accountability
and to seek equity and opportunity in social and education reform.
What is the meaning of peace, why should we study it, and how
should we achieve it? Although there are an increasing number of
manuscripts, curricula and initiatives that grapple with some
strand of peace education, there is, nonetheless, a dearth of
critical, cross-disciplinary, international projects/books that
examine peace education in conjunction with war and conflict.
Within this volume, the authors contend that war/military
conflict/violence are not a nebulous, far-away, mysterious venture;
rather, they argue that we are all, collectively, involved in
perpetrating and perpetuating militarization/conflict/violence
inside and outside of our own social circles. Therefore, education
about and against war can be as liberating as it is necessary. If
war equates killing, can our schools avoid engaging in the
examination of what war is all about? If education is not about
peace, then is it about war? Can a society have education that
willfully avoids considering peace as its central objective? Can a
democracy exist if pivotal notions of war and peace are not
understood, practiced, advocated and ensconced in public debate?
These questions, according to Carr and Porfilio and the
contributors they have assembled, merit a critical and extensive
reflection. This book seeks to provide a range of epistemological,
policy, pedagogical, curriculum and institutional analyses aimed at
facilitating meaningful engagement toward a more robust and
critical examination of the role that schools play (and can play)
in framing war, militarization and armed conflict and,
significantly, the connection to peace.
What is the meaning of peace, why should we study it, and how
should we achieve it? Although there are an increasing number of
manuscripts, curricula and initiatives that grapple with some
strand of peace education, there is, nonetheless, a dearth of
critical, cross-disciplinary, international projects/books that
examine peace education in conjunction with war and conflict.
Within this volume, the authors contend that war/military
conflict/violence are not a nebulous, far-away, mysterious venture;
rather, they argue that we are all, collectively, involved in
perpetrating and perpetuating militarization/conflict/violence
inside and outside of our own social circles. Therefore, education
about and against war can be as liberating as it is necessary. If
war equates killing, can our schools avoid engaging in the
examination of what war is all about? If education is not about
peace, then is it about war? Can a society have education that
willfully avoids considering peace as its central objective? Can a
democracy exist if pivotal notions of war and peace are not
understood, practiced, advocated and ensconced in public debate?
These questions, according to Carr and Porfilio and the
contributors they have assembled, merit a critical and extensive
reflection. This book seeks to provide a range of epistemological,
policy, pedagogical, curriculum and institutional analyses aimed at
facilitating meaningful engagement toward a more robust and
critical examination of the role that schools play (and can play)
in framing war, militarization and armed conflict and,
significantly, the connection to peace.
Pedagogies of Kindness and Respect presents a wide variety of
concepts from scholars and practitioners who discuss pedagogies of
kindness, an alternative to the "no excuses" ideology now
dominating the way that children are raised and educated in the
U.S. today. The fields of education, and especially early childhood
education, include some histories and perspectives that treat those
who are younger with kindness and respect. This book demonstrates
an informed awareness of this history and the ways that old and new
ideas can counter current conditions that are harmful to both those
who are younger and those who are older, while avoiding the
reconstitution of the romantic, innocent child who needs to be
saved by more advanced adults. Two interpretations of the
upbringing of children are investigated and challenged, one
suggesting that the poor do not know how to raise their children
and thus need help, while the other looks at those who are
privileged and therefore know how to nurture their young. These
opposing views have been discussed and problematized for more than
thirty years. Pedagogies of Kindness and Respect investigates the
issue of why this circumstance has continued and even worsened
today.
This edited volume contributes to a burgeoning field of critical
scholarship on the news media and education. This scholarship is
based on an understanding that the news media has increasingly
applied a neoliberal template that mediates knowledge and action
about education. This book calls into question what the public
knows about education, how the public is informed, and whose
interests are represented and ultimately served through the
production and distribution of information by the news media about
education. The chapters comprising this volume serve to enlighten
and call to action parents, students, educators, academics and
scholars, activists, and policymakers for social, political, and
economic transformation. Moreover, as the neoliberal agenda in
North America intensifies, the chapters in this book help to deepen
our understanding of the logics and processes of the neoliberal
privatization of education and the accompanying social discourses
that facilitate the reduction of social relations to a transaction
in the marketplace. The chapters examine the news media and the
reproduction of neoliberal educational reforms (A Nation at Risk,
Teach For America, charter schools, think tanks, and PISA) and
resistance to neoliberal educational reforms (online activism and
radical Black press) while also broadening our conceptual
understanding of the marketization and mediatization of educational
discourses. Overall, the book provides an in-depth understanding of
the neoliberal privatization of education by extending critical
examinations to this underrepresented field of cultural production:
the news media coverage of education. The contribution of this
edited volume, therefore, helps to build an understanding of the
contemporary dynamics of capital accumulation to inform public
resistance for social transformation.
Volume 1 Number 2 2015 The SoJo Journal: Educational Foundations
and Social Justice Education is an international peer reviewed
journal of educational foundations. The Department of Educational
Leadership at California State University, East Bay, whose mission
is to prepare and influence bold, socially responsible leaders who
will transform the world of schooling, hosts the journal. It
publishes essays that examine contemporary educational and social
contexts and practices from critical perspectives. The SoJo
Journal: Educational Foundations and Social Justice Education is
interested in research studies as well as conceptual, theoretical,
philosophical, and policy analysis essays that advance educational
practices that challenge the existing state of affairs in society,
schools, and (in)formal education. The SoJo Journal: Educational
Foundations and Social Justice Education is necessary because
currently there is not an exclusively international, Foundations of
Education journal. For instance, three of the leading journal in
Education Foundations journals (e.g., The Journal of Educational
Studies, British Journal of Sociology of Education, The Journal of
Educational Foundations) solicit manuscripts and support
scholarship mainly from professors who reside in Britain and the
United States. This journal is also unique because it will bring
together scholars and practitioners from disciplines outside of
Educational Foundations, who are equally committed to social change
and promoting equity and social justice inside and outside of K 16
schools.
The word fundamentalism usually conjures up images of religions and
their most zealous followers. Much less often the word appears in
connection with political economy. The phrase "free market" gives
the connotation that capitalism is freedom. Neoliberalism is the
rise of global free-market fundamentalism. It reaches into nearly
every aspect of our daily lives as it seeks to dominate and
eliminate the last vestiges of public domains through wanton
privatization and deregulation. It degrades all that is public. The
good news is that a global community of resistance continues to
struggle against neoliberal oppression. Formal and informal
education entities contribute to these struggles, offering visions
and strategies for creating a better future.The purpose of this
volume is twofold. Several contributors will highlight how the
neoliberal agenda is impacting educational policy formation,
teaching and learning, and relationships between K-12 schools and
communities. Other contributors will highlight how the global
community has gradually become conscious of the ideological
doctrine and how it is responsible for human suffering and misery.
The volume is needed because the growing body of educational
research linked to exploring the impact of neoliberalism on schools
and society fails to provide conceptual or historical understanding
of this ideology. It is also an important scholarly intervention
because it provides insights as to why educators, scholars, and
other global citizens have challenged the intrusion of market
forces over life inside K-12 schools. Teacher educators,
schoolteachers, and anyone who yearns to understand what is behind
the debilitating trend of commercial forces subverting humanizing
educational projects would benefit from this volume. Activists,
educators, youth, and scholars who seek strategies and visions for
building democratic schools and a society would consider this
volume essential reading.
At the time of Obama's draconian anti-immigrant policies leading to
massive deportation of undocumented, poor immigrants of colour,
there could not be a more timely and important book than this
edited volume, which critically examines ways in which immigration,
race, class, language, and gender issues intersect and impact the
life of many immigrants, including immigrant students. This book
documents the journey, many success-stories, as well as stories
that expose social inequity in schools and U.S. society. Further,
this book examines issues of social inequity and resource gaps
shaping the relations between affluent and poor-working class
students, including students of colour. Authors in this volume also
critically unpack anti-immigrant policies leading to the separation
of families and children. Equally important, contributors to this
book unveil ways and degree to which xenophobia and linguicism have
affected immigrants, including immigrant students and faculty of
colour, in both subtle and overt ways, and the manner in which many
have resisted these forms of oppression and affirmed their
humanity. Lastly, chapters in this much-needed and well-timed
volume have pointed out the way racism has limited life chances of
people of colour, including students of colour, preventing many of
them from fulfilling their potential succeeding in schools and
society at large.
Killing the Model Minority Stereotype comprehensively explores the
complex permutations of the Asian model minority myth, exposing the
ways in which stereotypes of Asian/Americans operate in the service
of racism. Chapters include counter-narratives, critical analyses,
and transnational perspectives. This volume connects to overarching
projects of decolonization, which social justice educators and
practitioners will find useful for understanding how the model
minority myth functions to uphold white supremacy and how
complicity has a damaging impact in its perpetuation. The book adds
a timely contribution to the model minority discourse.
Anyone who is touched by public education - teachers,
administrators, teacher-educators, students, parents, politicians,
pundits, and citizens - ought to read this book, a revamped and
updated second edition. It will speak to educators, policymakers
and citizens who are concerned about the future of education and
its relation to a robust, participatory democracy. The perspectives
offered by a wonderfully diverse collection of contributors provide
a glimpse into the complex, multilayered factors that shape, and
are shaped by, education institutions today. The analyses presented
in this text are critical of how globalization and neoliberalism
exert increasing levels of control over the public institutions
meant to support the common good. Readers of this book will be well
prepared to participate in the dialogue that will influence the
future of public education in United States, and beyond - a
dialogue that must seek the kind of change that represents hope for
all students. As for the question contained in the title of the
book - The Phenomenon of Obama and the Agenda for Education: Can
Hope (Still) Audaciously Trump Neoliberalism? (Second Edition) -,
Carr and Porfilio develop a framework that integrates the work of
the contributors, including Christine Sleeter and Dennis Carlson,
who wrote the original forward and afterword respectively, and the
updated ones written by Paul Street, Peter Mclaren and Dennis
Carlson, which problematize how the Obama administration has
presented an extremely constrained, conservative notion of change
in and through education. The rhetoric has not been matched by
meaningful, tangible, transformative proposals, policies and
programs aimed at transformative change, and now fully into a
second mandate this second edition of the book is able to more
substantively provide a vigorous critique of the contemporary
educational and political landscape. There are many reasons for
this, and, according to the contributors to this book, it is clear
that neoliberalism is a major obstacle to stimulating the hope that
so many have been hoping for. Addressing systemic inequities
embedded within neoliberalism, Carr and Porfilio argue, is key to
achieving the hope so brilliantly presented by Obama during the
campaign that brought him to the presidency.
The word fundamentalism usually conjures up images of religions and
their most zealous followers. Much less often the word appears in
connection with political economy. The phrase "free market" gives
the connotation that capitalism is freedom. Neoliberalism is the
rise of global free-market fundamentalism. It reaches into nearly
every aspect of our daily lives as it seeks to dominate and
eliminate the last vestiges of public domains through wanton
privatization and deregulation. It degrades all that is public. The
good news is that a global community of resistance continues to
struggle against neoliberal oppression. Formal and informal
education entities contribute to these struggles, offering visions
and strategies for creating a better future. The purpose of this
volume is twofold. Several contributors will highlight how the
neoliberal agenda is impacting educational policy formation,
teaching and learning, and relationships between institutions of
higher education and communities. Other contributors will highlight
how the global community has gradually become conscious of the
ideological doctrine and how it is responsible for human suffering
and misery. The volume is needed because the growing body of
educational research linked to exploring the impact of
neoliberalism on education and society fails to provide conceptual
or historical understanding of this ideology. It is also an
important scholarly intervention because it provides insights as to
why educators, scholars, and other global citizens have challenged
the intrusion of market forces over life inside universities and
colleges. Teaching faculty, research faculty, and anyone who yearns
to understand what is behind the debilitating trend of commercial
forces subverting humanizing educational projects would benefit
from this volume. Activists, educators, youth, and scholars who
seek strategies and visions for building democratic higher
education and a more democratic society would consider this volume
essential reading.
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