This article seeks to further understandings of contemporary patterns of parental government. It explores the politicisation of family life by examining a pilot programme tasked with enhancing parental engagement in education amongst ���hard-to-reach��� families within the white British community of a large inner-London borough. Focusing on the programme���s signature device ��� the deployment of community-based ���link workers��� to bridge home and school ��� ���governmentality��� (Foucault, 2009) is used as a theoretical lens through which to foreground the link workers��� role in governing parents. We draw on qualitative data collected from link workers, parents, and school leaders, to argue that link workers represent a mode of governme...
This article draws on a study which investigated the interpretation and use of Social and Emotional ...
This chapter explores how a radical pluralist democratic understanding of parent engagement can offe...
In England, until May 2010, the New Labour party had been in power for thirteen years. This paper is...
This article seeks to further understandings of contemporary patterns of parental government. Parent...
The last two decades have witnessed an increasing politicisation of parenting and the emergence of p...
Home-school relations, home learning and parental engagement are prominent educational policy issues...
In this paper we explore the various spaces and sites through which the figure of the parent is summ...
Family learning has been an important mode of education deployed by governments in the United Kingdo...
The neoliberalisation of education policy has led to the valorisation of particular parents and the ...
In opposition to the discourse of silent compliance and the neoliberal colonisation of voice, this a...
Research, policy and practice on education in recent years has focused attention on the mediating ro...
This research study was driven by a personal frustration at the lack of democratic parent engagement...
It would be politically naive to assume that greater involvement of parents is the panacea for the p...
This thesis is a qualitative study of the power relations structuring interactions between parents ...
At a time when neo-liberal policy agenda are resulting in many public services being taken away from...
This article draws on a study which investigated the interpretation and use of Social and Emotional ...
This chapter explores how a radical pluralist democratic understanding of parent engagement can offe...
In England, until May 2010, the New Labour party had been in power for thirteen years. This paper is...
This article seeks to further understandings of contemporary patterns of parental government. Parent...
The last two decades have witnessed an increasing politicisation of parenting and the emergence of p...
Home-school relations, home learning and parental engagement are prominent educational policy issues...
In this paper we explore the various spaces and sites through which the figure of the parent is summ...
Family learning has been an important mode of education deployed by governments in the United Kingdo...
The neoliberalisation of education policy has led to the valorisation of particular parents and the ...
In opposition to the discourse of silent compliance and the neoliberal colonisation of voice, this a...
Research, policy and practice on education in recent years has focused attention on the mediating ro...
This research study was driven by a personal frustration at the lack of democratic parent engagement...
It would be politically naive to assume that greater involvement of parents is the panacea for the p...
This thesis is a qualitative study of the power relations structuring interactions between parents ...
At a time when neo-liberal policy agenda are resulting in many public services being taken away from...
This article draws on a study which investigated the interpretation and use of Social and Emotional ...
This chapter explores how a radical pluralist democratic understanding of parent engagement can offe...
In England, until May 2010, the New Labour party had been in power for thirteen years. This paper is...