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While Sweden is often viewed as a benchmark for equality within
education, this book examines this assumption in greater depth. The
author argues that Sweden's education system - even prior to the
global spread of neoliberalism in education, meta-policies and
privatization - was never particularly equal. Instead, what became
apparent was a system that offered advantages to the upper social
classes under a sheen of meritocracy and tolerable inequalities.
Combining ethnographic and meta-ethnographic methodologies and
analyses, the author examines the phenomenon of structural
injustice in the Swedish education system both vertically and
diachronically across a period of intensive transformation and
reform. This revealing volume offers a mode of engagement that will
be of value and interest to researchers and students of injustices
within education, as well as policy makers and practitioners.
While Sweden is often viewed as a benchmark for equality within
education, this book examines this assumption in greater depth. The
author argues that Sweden's education system - even prior to the
global spread of neoliberalism in education, meta-policies and
privatization - was never particularly equal. Instead, what became
apparent was a system that offered advantages to the upper social
classes under a sheen of meritocracy and tolerable inequalities.
Combining ethnographic and meta-ethnographic methodologies and
analyses, the author examines the phenomenon of structural
injustice in the Swedish education system both vertically and
diachronically across a period of intensive transformation and
reform. This revealing volume offers a mode of engagement that will
be of value and interest to researchers and students of injustices
within education, as well as policy makers and practitioners.
This book is the result of extensive ethnographic research that has
analysed the experiences of young people from immigrant families in
the Nordic cities of Copenhagen, Gothenburg and Oslo. Concepts of
cultural and urban studies, sociology, education and other
disciplines are used - inclusion/exclusion, territorial
stigmatisation, post-colonialism and critical race theory. In many
ways suburban youth are to be viewed as a class-in-itself:
objectified by curricula and school practices, often vilified,
downtrodden and symbolically exploited in the mainstream media and
common understanding. At the same time their youth cultures evoke
the other half of the Marxist class concept, the class-for-itself,
in understanding youth sub-cultures as creative collective
responses and resistance to a shared social situation. The hip-hop
cultures of youth in multicultural areas are often postmodern in
identity-play and aesthetics, but by no means de-politicised, and
furthermore these youths display creativity in the social media
where they challenge dominant discourses of place, identity and
belonging in society. The Nordic countries are often seen as the
home of egalitarianism and decent hosts of immigrants, but this
book reveals a more complicated picture. Inclusion and
multiculturalism may be key words in Nordic educational policy, but
analyses of curricula and teaching practices show that these goals
are far from realised. Curricula stress a Nordic, Western and
Christian cultural heritage, school practices recommend migrants to
adapt to life style of the natives and residential segregation is a
central factor in mechanisms of exclusion. All major cities in the
Nordic countries have immigrant-dense areas, primarily in suburbs
that were originally built for the upwardly mobile native working
class. This segregation means less opportunities in the educational
system and it is difficult to apply for a job from 'the wrong
address'. At the same time these areas have become the nests of
creative and resistant youth cultures.
The teaching and practice of democracy in schools might be
considered particularly important in the present era as young
people are spending increasing amounts of time in education. Upper
secondary schools and universities are becoming more common
post-school options than conventional workplaces. Consequently, the
experience of democratic participation among the young people is
strongly related to education spaces. Contemporary research shows
the teaching of democratic values to typically emphasise individual
freedom of choice and individual rights, at the expense of
collective justice, political criticism and reflection. This risks
leaving young people without guidance for how to exert influence
both inside school and more generally. However, we lack knowledge
about the relations between the content and organisation of
teaching, and young people's attitudes and actions, as they
typically constitute different research fields. This book attempts
to help bridge this gap. Young people's influence and democratic
education explores the teaching of democracy in school. In
particular it relates to young peoples' responses and initiatives
to change in formal education. Based on recent ethnographic
investigations of Swedish upper secondary schools the book has been
developed with a special focus on gender in relation to social
background. Five differently gendered and classed upper secondary
programmes were studied in detail. Theoretically, the book draws in
particular on Bernsteinian and feminist perspectives. The book
includes close individual analyses of the researched upper
secondary classes as well as common presentations of previous
research, theory and main empirical results. Central joint themes
that are explored concerns teaching students to influence, student
initiatives to exert influence, conditions for developing valued
masculinities and femininities, the reproduction of hierarchical
relations, and representations and relations of theory and
practice.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
In Sweden a new 'third way' welfarist society has led to the
education system being exposed to market forces and successive
waves of privatisation and this new commercial education can be
characterised as a commodity in the market place. The schools have
been transformed from being amongst the most highly regulated
education systems in the world to being amongst the least
regulated. Education and the commodity problem uses ethnographic
research to investigate and describe what is often termed a changed
root-metaphor of schooling in Sweden. Here control over the
curriculum has changed from the State to the individual in a
situation where students are, with help and guidance from teachers,
to look for their own knowledge, and to a degree, choose their own
educational content and to develop a lust for life-long learning.
This change is sometimes referred to as one from a transmission
curriculum to a constructivist one. But the book shows that the
change is neither straightforward nor unproblematic. Education and
the commodity problem is based on a series of related ethnographic
investigations carried out over a long period of time. It has
suggested that educational institutions are places where knowledge
and learning can appear with both 'use-value' and commoditised
forms, as the accumulation of educational capital. It also
describes the problems that can be associated with the commodity
form of education value in practice and the meaning and
significance of these developments as a characterisation of
globalisation processes and the de-regulation of State
intervention.
The idea of democratic schooling with its emphasis on equality is
seriously attacked by the marketisation of education. New policies
of educational restructuring emphasise accountability and close
links between school and industry, where schools and students
become targets of constant evaluation and competition. This book
challenges such policies and practices through analyses of their
negative consequences for social justice and democracy. It explores
the effects of restructuring on everyday life in schools and other
educational institutions and presents analyses of how differences
based on gender, social class, ethnicity, nationality and
embodiment are dealt with in educational settings. The authors draw
on a range of theories, including poststructuralist, postcolonial,
feminist and Marxist perspectives, and the localised ethnographies
are contextualised in changing educational politics. How policies
are contradicted by practices is discussed in relation to the
classroom, teacher education and issues of inclusion and exclusion.
A critical gaze is directed at Nordic countries where restructuring
processes contradict a political discourse based on equality and
comprehensive education. It is the immersion in the daily life of
institutions and their participants that gives ethnography a
particular edge in obtaining insights into what changes and what
stays the same. This book provides a looking glass into the
tensions and contradictions that New Right policies have introduced
in educational institutions. Actors in the field experience
frustration in introducing changes and controlling the direction of
those changes. It is their voices that ethnographers try to hear
and disseminate.
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