Paper presented at the conference 'Politics, Economy and Society: Irish Developmentalism, 1958-2008', held at University College Dublin on 12 March 2009The role of Patrick Cannon as a developmentalist critic of the educational status quo at the beginning of the 1960s is highlighted by Tom Garvin in Preventing the Future. Here the organisation the Headmaster of Sandymount High School led, the Federation of Lay Catholic Secondary Schools, is depicted as coming in from the bureaucratic cold as Jack Lynch brought a more activist, reformist ministerial presence into the Department of Education. But although the reforming trend continued under Lynch's successor, Patrick Hillery, Cannon and his organisation quickly found themselves operatin...
Summary: Educational inequality is a persistent feature on the landscape of Irish educational histor...
It would not cause too much debate to suggest that Ireland in the late 1950s was a depressing countr...
Northern Ireland remains a deeply divided society. The education system mirrors the broader societal...
The catalytic effect of the OECD-linked study that produced Investment in Education is a much celebr...
Education maintains a unique position in contemporary societies due to an often unquestioned assump...
Paper presented at the conference Politics, economy and society: Irish developmentism, 1958-2008. Un...
Unsuccessful domestic attempts to raise the profile of science and technology in Irish policy debat...
While higher education did not feature prominently in the public consciousness during the first fou...
The Curricular pattern into which secondary school pupils were pressed was remarkable chiefly as a...
During the 1960s a paradigm shift occurred within Irish education thanks to the penetration of the R...
This paper explores the impact of significant OECD documents on the development of Irish education p...
The mainstreaming of the optional Transition Year (TY) programme in 1994 was a significant innovatio...
"In the nineties, dialogue in the Irish education system has been frenetic and painful at times...
Abstract. Our identity is defined by the stories we tell about the past and the stories that we supp...
Summary: Educational inequality is a persistent feature on the landscape of Irish educational histor...
It would not cause too much debate to suggest that Ireland in the late 1950s was a depressing countr...
Northern Ireland remains a deeply divided society. The education system mirrors the broader societal...
The catalytic effect of the OECD-linked study that produced Investment in Education is a much celebr...
Education maintains a unique position in contemporary societies due to an often unquestioned assump...
Paper presented at the conference Politics, economy and society: Irish developmentism, 1958-2008. Un...
Unsuccessful domestic attempts to raise the profile of science and technology in Irish policy debat...
While higher education did not feature prominently in the public consciousness during the first fou...
The Curricular pattern into which secondary school pupils were pressed was remarkable chiefly as a...
During the 1960s a paradigm shift occurred within Irish education thanks to the penetration of the R...
This paper explores the impact of significant OECD documents on the development of Irish education p...
The mainstreaming of the optional Transition Year (TY) programme in 1994 was a significant innovatio...
"In the nineties, dialogue in the Irish education system has been frenetic and painful at times...
Abstract. Our identity is defined by the stories we tell about the past and the stories that we supp...
Summary: Educational inequality is a persistent feature on the landscape of Irish educational histor...
It would not cause too much debate to suggest that Ireland in the late 1950s was a depressing countr...
Northern Ireland remains a deeply divided society. The education system mirrors the broader societal...