A key aim of democratic public policy should be the provision of hope. It is often argued that a key element of hope is not only a drive for equity in the face of neo-liberal marketization, but also the opportunity for the practice of agency by (especially disadvantaged) citizens. Here we examine the relationship between democracy and hope in an educational context by discussing recent education and training reforms 'for the future' (ETRF) in the Australian state of Queensland. We argue that these reforms have provided the opportunity for active democratic participation by young people and their communities in planning their futures and that they therefore provide an instance of what we have called 'robust hope'
Recent scholarship on the affective dimensions of social change has pointed toward hope as an eth-ic...
This paper addresses issues in relation to recent criticism of teacher education, set in the broader...
The more fundamental challenge is to open the doors to young people, recognising the place at the ta...
Robust hope aims to contribute to educational praxis. In Australia, what counts as teacher education...
The research question for this paper is: How can we mobilise robust hope in the analysis of teacher ...
This paper discusses a recent Australian study of boys’ education using case studies to determine su...
Towards the end of the 19th century there was a revival of the struggle for democracy throughout the...
Using the Education Queensland Reform Agenda to illustrate examples and approaches to education refo...
This paper seeks to challenge the view that there are no alternatives today to global neo-liberalism...
© 2012 Dr. Roslyn BlackYoung people’s democratic participation is the focus of a growing body of edu...
Community engagement is crucial to Australian Catholic University's mission. The university's Instit...
In South Africa, the processes of democratisation and social restructuring are inextricably linked t...
“Education, therefore, is a process of living and not a preparation for future living. John DeweyThe...
Concerns have been raised internationally about whether alternative learning programmes are producin...
Schooling for Democracy in a Time of Global Crisis combines democratic theory with education practic...
Recent scholarship on the affective dimensions of social change has pointed toward hope as an eth-ic...
This paper addresses issues in relation to recent criticism of teacher education, set in the broader...
The more fundamental challenge is to open the doors to young people, recognising the place at the ta...
Robust hope aims to contribute to educational praxis. In Australia, what counts as teacher education...
The research question for this paper is: How can we mobilise robust hope in the analysis of teacher ...
This paper discusses a recent Australian study of boys’ education using case studies to determine su...
Towards the end of the 19th century there was a revival of the struggle for democracy throughout the...
Using the Education Queensland Reform Agenda to illustrate examples and approaches to education refo...
This paper seeks to challenge the view that there are no alternatives today to global neo-liberalism...
© 2012 Dr. Roslyn BlackYoung people’s democratic participation is the focus of a growing body of edu...
Community engagement is crucial to Australian Catholic University's mission. The university's Instit...
In South Africa, the processes of democratisation and social restructuring are inextricably linked t...
“Education, therefore, is a process of living and not a preparation for future living. John DeweyThe...
Concerns have been raised internationally about whether alternative learning programmes are producin...
Schooling for Democracy in a Time of Global Crisis combines democratic theory with education practic...
Recent scholarship on the affective dimensions of social change has pointed toward hope as an eth-ic...
This paper addresses issues in relation to recent criticism of teacher education, set in the broader...
The more fundamental challenge is to open the doors to young people, recognising the place at the ta...