This article explores contemporary commercial school-business relationships in New Zealand schools, in a context of intensifying of child-business relationships, and in particular the blurring of once clear boundaries between children’s learning, their entertainment experiences, and the commercial efforts of corporate marketing and public relations. These child-business relationships in turn arise through contemporary consumer capitalism, and three problematic features of this economy are considered: inequality, commodification and globalisation. The last part of the article considers how schools are currently managing their commercial school-business relationships, with a particular emphasis on classroom teachers, and curriculum-related ma...
The literature on school commercialism, despite a number of successes in battling advertising and ma...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
We are living in a world of commercialization-everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
In the 1990s there was public speculation that New Zealand schools and businesses were establishing ...
In the 1990s there was public speculation that New Zealand schools and businesses were establishing ...
Public education in New Zealand has become a globally marketable commodity, with the “export educati...
We are living in a world of commercialization—everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
The intensification of data collection practices in schooling – often due to state accountability re...
We are living in a world of commercialization—everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
The intensification of data collection practices in schooling – often due to state accountability re...
This paper situates trade in education services in the broader debates regarding the marketisation o...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
This paper situates trade in education services in the broader debates regarding the marketisation o...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
The literature on school commercialism, despite a number of successes in battling advertising and ma...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
We are living in a world of commercialization-everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
In the 1990s there was public speculation that New Zealand schools and businesses were establishing ...
In the 1990s there was public speculation that New Zealand schools and businesses were establishing ...
Public education in New Zealand has become a globally marketable commodity, with the “export educati...
We are living in a world of commercialization—everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
The intensification of data collection practices in schooling – often due to state accountability re...
We are living in a world of commercialization—everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...
The intensification of data collection practices in schooling – often due to state accountability re...
This paper situates trade in education services in the broader debates regarding the marketisation o...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
This paper situates trade in education services in the broader debates regarding the marketisation o...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
The literature on school commercialism, despite a number of successes in battling advertising and ma...
This paper explores teachers’ and school leaders’ perceptions of commercialisation in Australian pub...
We are living in a world of commercialization-everything has a price tag and conspicuous consumption...