Research and policy in education often draws on language accentuating opposing ideological principles, claiming definitions of “good” versus “poor” teaching strategies. These unhelpful dichotomies are legitimised through surveillance and evaluation strategies because pressures from economic and social policies promote competitive, audit cultures. New Zealand education policies are largely modelled on the British system; Britain is arguably positioned at the extreme of a continuum of marketised, commercial models. However, when the importance of integral emotional processes of learning are diminished through neoliberal, managerialist strategies which favour quantitative outcomes, there are negative consequences for students and teachers. By ...
This is a study of the New Zealand English curriculums, 1969-1996. The study is organised around th...
This essay proposes a defence of a form of teaching eroded by what Sennet (2006) calls ‘the culture ...
Hargreaves (1998) argued that emotions are central to teaching. While some attention has been given...
The state education system in the UK has undergone significant transformation such that New Labour's...
Teacher quality is claimed to have the greatest in-school effect on student achievement. This claim ...
Research has shown that in many contexts, the transformation of the public sector associated with ne...
The term paradigm lost (with apologies to Milton) references the lost opportunities arising from a d...
This paper, a critical examination of educational concepts, policies and practices, presents finding...
ABSTRACT Economic and cultural globalisation has resulted in particular political ideologies in poli...
The last 20 years has witnessed the spread of corporatism in education on a global scale. In England...
This thesis draws on data from a research study that investigated the lived experiences of six Māor...
Research has shown that in many contexts, the transformation of the public sector associated with ne...
The central motive for conducting this research was to investigate how different countries (Greece, ...
Twenty years ago, Charles Mills argued that a Racial Contract underwrites and guides the social cont...
This paper provides a review of curriculum change under successive governments, highlighting the da...
This is a study of the New Zealand English curriculums, 1969-1996. The study is organised around th...
This essay proposes a defence of a form of teaching eroded by what Sennet (2006) calls ‘the culture ...
Hargreaves (1998) argued that emotions are central to teaching. While some attention has been given...
The state education system in the UK has undergone significant transformation such that New Labour's...
Teacher quality is claimed to have the greatest in-school effect on student achievement. This claim ...
Research has shown that in many contexts, the transformation of the public sector associated with ne...
The term paradigm lost (with apologies to Milton) references the lost opportunities arising from a d...
This paper, a critical examination of educational concepts, policies and practices, presents finding...
ABSTRACT Economic and cultural globalisation has resulted in particular political ideologies in poli...
The last 20 years has witnessed the spread of corporatism in education on a global scale. In England...
This thesis draws on data from a research study that investigated the lived experiences of six Māor...
Research has shown that in many contexts, the transformation of the public sector associated with ne...
The central motive for conducting this research was to investigate how different countries (Greece, ...
Twenty years ago, Charles Mills argued that a Racial Contract underwrites and guides the social cont...
This paper provides a review of curriculum change under successive governments, highlighting the da...
This is a study of the New Zealand English curriculums, 1969-1996. The study is organised around th...
This essay proposes a defence of a form of teaching eroded by what Sennet (2006) calls ‘the culture ...
Hargreaves (1998) argued that emotions are central to teaching. While some attention has been given...