In a society having different leve1s of income and of education, the idea of "grassroots" tends to be associated with the lowest level of all and therefore to have somewhat unsophisticated, earthy connotations. That this does not follow is demonstrated by the case studied in this article, where Robinson shows how a perceived threat to a neighbourhood school may stimulate a highly sober and sophisticated reaction by middle-class people, who command a wide variety of expertise. Does it seem reasonable to expect that this kind of group experience, once begun, is unlikely to end at that - with a return to an attitude of laisser-faire towards school-board decisions whether routine or strategic? Like the Coleman article, but also in con...
This article describes a funding announcement by the prime minister of Canada at a high school in Wi...
In this article we question the discursive deployment of narrowing conceptions of the future in educ...
The mills of God may grind slowly in North American education, but with the assistance of Peter Cole...
to save the neighbourhood school In a society having different leve1s of income and of emœtion, the ...
National audienceThis article explores the participatory practices of education in the experimental ...
Are we asking the school to assume too great a responsibility for the educational and social develop...
http://www.cairn.info/revue-societes-contemporaines-2007-3-page-67.htmInternational audienceThis art...
Mobs are really frightening. But is development toward participatory democracy in general simply mot...
This article argues that Quebec public education, as measured by conventional criteria, was more fic...
One thing far from settled in public education systems is the role parents and citizens may play in ...
Can simply talking about policy strengthen democracy? Drawing on data collected for case studies of ...
This thesis follows the historical movement of Quebec's educational and language policies for the pu...
This article examines how recent policy reforms in Nova Scotia, Canada, encouraged and constrained d...
National audienceThis article focuses on the social pedagogy practices of the GPAS network, aiming t...
In this article I explore the debate about common schooling in an increasingly diverse and less defe...
This article describes a funding announcement by the prime minister of Canada at a high school in Wi...
In this article we question the discursive deployment of narrowing conceptions of the future in educ...
The mills of God may grind slowly in North American education, but with the assistance of Peter Cole...
to save the neighbourhood school In a society having different leve1s of income and of emœtion, the ...
National audienceThis article explores the participatory practices of education in the experimental ...
Are we asking the school to assume too great a responsibility for the educational and social develop...
http://www.cairn.info/revue-societes-contemporaines-2007-3-page-67.htmInternational audienceThis art...
Mobs are really frightening. But is development toward participatory democracy in general simply mot...
This article argues that Quebec public education, as measured by conventional criteria, was more fic...
One thing far from settled in public education systems is the role parents and citizens may play in ...
Can simply talking about policy strengthen democracy? Drawing on data collected for case studies of ...
This thesis follows the historical movement of Quebec's educational and language policies for the pu...
This article examines how recent policy reforms in Nova Scotia, Canada, encouraged and constrained d...
National audienceThis article focuses on the social pedagogy practices of the GPAS network, aiming t...
In this article I explore the debate about common schooling in an increasingly diverse and less defe...
This article describes a funding announcement by the prime minister of Canada at a high school in Wi...
In this article we question the discursive deployment of narrowing conceptions of the future in educ...
The mills of God may grind slowly in North American education, but with the assistance of Peter Cole...