The idea of a democratic education in the English context has lost a considerable amount of ground since the 1960s. Here I argue that such is the dominance of neoliberal understandings of education over the Right and much of the social democratic Left that new thinking is required. I begin by considering the view that we have now become so post-democratic that people no longer wish to be free. It is in this context that we may talk about the alterity of democracy. I explore different ideas about how we might seek to link education to ideas of the commons, thereby connecting the idea of education to more participatory notions of citizenship. All of these ideas need to be revived in the context of a state that increasingly controls schools fr...
This short paper is a response to Nel Noddings’s article on schooling for democracy. Whilst agreeing...
Background/Context: Ever since the Enlightenment, there has been a strong tendency in educational th...
In this article I address education beyond individualism, elitism and instrumentalism and instead un...
The idea of a democratic education in the English context has lost a considerable amount of ground s...
The ideas of the New Left and the recently emerged alter-globalisation movements are marginal within...
Over the last couple of decades, the narrative of educational competitiveness and the current clima...
In Challenging Freedom: Neoliberalism and the Erosion of Democratic Education, the author suggests...
In the first chapter of this thesis, I examine the similarities between the concept of democracy a...
We live in interesting times, not least because democracy is both under threat and, in part as a con...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
Contemporary education research, policy and practice are complex and challenging. The political stru...
Compared to the international mainstream educational agenda, which is widely sustained by a neo-libe...
In Radical Schooling for Democracy: Engaging Philosophy of Education for the Public Good, Neil Hool...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
From the first co-operative trust school at Reddish Vale in Manchester in 2006, the following decade...
This short paper is a response to Nel Noddings’s article on schooling for democracy. Whilst agreeing...
Background/Context: Ever since the Enlightenment, there has been a strong tendency in educational th...
In this article I address education beyond individualism, elitism and instrumentalism and instead un...
The idea of a democratic education in the English context has lost a considerable amount of ground s...
The ideas of the New Left and the recently emerged alter-globalisation movements are marginal within...
Over the last couple of decades, the narrative of educational competitiveness and the current clima...
In Challenging Freedom: Neoliberalism and the Erosion of Democratic Education, the author suggests...
In the first chapter of this thesis, I examine the similarities between the concept of democracy a...
We live in interesting times, not least because democracy is both under threat and, in part as a con...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
Contemporary education research, policy and practice are complex and challenging. The political stru...
Compared to the international mainstream educational agenda, which is widely sustained by a neo-libe...
In Radical Schooling for Democracy: Engaging Philosophy of Education for the Public Good, Neil Hool...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
From the first co-operative trust school at Reddish Vale in Manchester in 2006, the following decade...
This short paper is a response to Nel Noddings’s article on schooling for democracy. Whilst agreeing...
Background/Context: Ever since the Enlightenment, there has been a strong tendency in educational th...
In this article I address education beyond individualism, elitism and instrumentalism and instead un...