Public schools around the world have been hijacked and deformed beyond recognition by the forces of the economy over the past three decades. This paper provides an analysis and a way out of this miasma around the notion of the socially just school. While not another prescription, this orientation is argued to be the most hopeful possibility for those parts of the community that have lost the most through the spot-welding of schools onto the economy. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
In many nations, neo-liberal discourses shape education systems in ways that privilege a business mo...
This paper troubles notions of ‘social justice’ as being compromised and fractured by the autonomous...
Secondary schooling continues to marginalise a significant minority of young people attending school...
Public schools around the world have been hijacked and deformed beyond recognition by the forces of ...
This paper argues that growing inequalities make it imperative that schools reinvent themselves arou...
This article reports on Australian research that developed the concept of 'productive pedagogies', a...
In this article, the author presents a review of his extended research engagement with disadvantaged...
In neo-liberal times educational policy and practice is being realigned more closely to the shifting...
In this paper I argue that values of democracy and social justice in education would seem to have be...
This book provokes a conversation about what supportive schooling contexts for both students and tea...
Australia has a long history of policy attention to the education of poor and working-class youth (C...
In the field of education, a focus on schools and other educational sites serving vulnerable communi...
This paper explores the complex issues of student engagement and school retention from a critical/so...
This article argues that if students in disadvantaged schools and communities are going to receive a...
This paper seeks to challenge the view that there are no alternatives today to global neo-liberalism...
In many nations, neo-liberal discourses shape education systems in ways that privilege a business mo...
This paper troubles notions of ‘social justice’ as being compromised and fractured by the autonomous...
Secondary schooling continues to marginalise a significant minority of young people attending school...
Public schools around the world have been hijacked and deformed beyond recognition by the forces of ...
This paper argues that growing inequalities make it imperative that schools reinvent themselves arou...
This article reports on Australian research that developed the concept of 'productive pedagogies', a...
In this article, the author presents a review of his extended research engagement with disadvantaged...
In neo-liberal times educational policy and practice is being realigned more closely to the shifting...
In this paper I argue that values of democracy and social justice in education would seem to have be...
This book provokes a conversation about what supportive schooling contexts for both students and tea...
Australia has a long history of policy attention to the education of poor and working-class youth (C...
In the field of education, a focus on schools and other educational sites serving vulnerable communi...
This paper explores the complex issues of student engagement and school retention from a critical/so...
This article argues that if students in disadvantaged schools and communities are going to receive a...
This paper seeks to challenge the view that there are no alternatives today to global neo-liberalism...
In many nations, neo-liberal discourses shape education systems in ways that privilege a business mo...
This paper troubles notions of ‘social justice’ as being compromised and fractured by the autonomous...
Secondary schooling continues to marginalise a significant minority of young people attending school...