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This open access book explores different landscapes of Lifelong
Learning policies (LLP), producing case-based examinations of their
institutional, discursive, and relational dimensions. Across
Europe, young people develop their life courses amidst diverse
living conditions and are confronted with a variety of
institutional and structural arrangements that impact on their
opportunities in education and labour. Considering the relevance of
LLP in shaping those opportunities, the chapters draw from
multi-level, mixed-methods research and offer original insights on
the interplay of discourses and governance patterns in the
processes of policy-making and deliverance. The book yields
noteworthy insights into the widely differing realities across the
European landscape, and also into the diverging ways young people
deal with and actively participate in LLP.
This book examines how the Global Education Industry (GEI) has
brokered, funded, and implemented new conceptualizations of 'good'
education. With a focus on new private providers and policy actors
in education, the authors of the book analyze the impact of the GEI
on educational research, policy and practice. How did
philanthropies and foundations manage to make their voices heard in
school reform debates, what are the implication of digital
technologies and data infrastructures on teaching and learning, and
should the fast advance of the GEI be merely seen as a logical
consequence of the commercialization of education? Moving beyond
single-country case studies, the book focuses on key issues related
to the study of the Global Education Industry in an international
context, discussing the rationales, processes and impacts of
current developments. This comprehensive book will be of interest
and value to scholars and researchers of the GEI, as well as policy
makers.
Drawing on findings from a large EU-funded research project that
took place over three years, this book analyses educational
trajectories of young people in eight European countries: Finland,
France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia and the
United Kingdom. Contributors explore interactions between
structural and institutional contexts of educational trajectories,
the individual meaning attached to education and the strategies
adopted by young people to cope with its demands. The book also
analyses the decision-making processes of individual students,
placing them firmly within the social contexts of their families,
local schools, national education systems and welfare states, as
well as transnational policy contexts. In considering educational
disadvantage, the book is based on primary, cross-national research
with systematic analysis of the different themes addressed. As
every chaptersis co-authored by two or three researchers, each
based in a different country, the book goes beyond the usual
country-based chapter design to provide an enriched insight into
both comparative theory and research methods.
This open access book explores different landscapes of Lifelong
Learning policies (LLP), producing case-based examinations of their
institutional, discursive, and relational dimensions. Across
Europe, young people develop their life courses amidst diverse
living conditions and are confronted with a variety of
institutional and structural arrangements that impact on their
opportunities in education and labour. Considering the relevance of
LLP in shaping those opportunities, the chapters draw from
multi-level, mixed-methods research and offer original insights on
the interplay of discourses and governance patterns in the
processes of policy-making and deliverance. The book yields
noteworthy insights into the widely differing realities across the
European landscape, and also into the diverging ways young people
deal with and actively participate in LLP.
Drawing on findings from a large EU-funded research project that
took place over three years, this book analyses educational
trajectories of young people in eight European countries: Finland,
France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia and the
United Kingdom. Contributors explore interactions between
structural and institutional contexts of educational trajectories,
the individual meaning attached to education and the strategies
adopted by young people to cope with its demands. The book also
analyses the decision-making processes of individual students,
placing them firmly within the social contexts of their families,
local schools, national education systems and welfare states, as
well as transnational policy contexts. In considering educational
disadvantage, the book is based on primary, cross-national research
with systematic analysis of the different themes addressed. As
every chaptersis co-authored by two or three researchers, each
based in a different country, the book goes beyond the usual
country-based chapter design to provide an enriched insight into
both comparative theory and research methods.
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