Rethinking the Education Improvement Agenda: A Critical Philosophical Approach
Autor Dr Kevin J. Flint, Dr Nick Peimen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 noi 2011
Drawing on philosophical work, including that of Derrida, Foucault and Heidegger, the authors deconstruct the ethic of improvement before exploring key dimensions of education, its institutions and technologies. Each chapter draws on international case studies, provides engaging questions and makes suggestions for further reading to support the reader. Topics covered include:
. The Ethic of Improvement. Teacher Education
. Leadership and Management
. Lifelong Learning
. The Rhetoric of Numbers
. The Governance of Childhood
. The State of Education Research
An essential text for all looking at how we think and talk about education and improvement.
Preț: 306.98 lei
Preț vechi: 334.94 lei
-8% Nou
Puncte Express: 460
Preț estimativ în valută:
58.75€ • 61.61$ • 48.99£
58.75€ • 61.61$ • 48.99£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 08-22 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441129734
ISBN-10: 1441129731
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441129731
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Brings leading edge philosophy of education to current educational practice.
Notă biografică
Kevin J Flint is Reader in Education at Nottingham Trent University, UK.Nick Peim is a Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of Birmingham, UK.
Cuprins
Introduction \ 1. Education, the School and the State \ 2. Education, the Language of Improvement and Governmentality: The Enframing in Practice \ 3. Governing Childhood \ 4. Educational Research: Improvement and Metaphysics \ 5. Schooling: The Social Landscape of Modernity \ 6. Initial Teacher Education: Practice, Performativity and Identity \ 7. The Enframing in the Leadership and Management of Education \ 8. The Enframing and Lifelong Learning \ 9. The Rhetoric of Numbers \ 10. Fifteen Theses on Education \ References \ Index
Recenzii
'Rethinking the Education Agenda fills a huge gap in our understanding of the role and function of schooling. Eschewing a standard argument that the state and (true) education are in opposition, Flint and Peim provide an accessible analysis of a wide range of ideas which challenges traditional assumptions about power and government. This is a much needed myth-busting book that will stretch our thinking about schools and schooling, childhood and life-long learning, teacher education and identity, research and statistics. The insights offered by the authors are fresh and provocative and provide new ways of thinking about education policy in an era of accountability. It should be recommended reading for any student of culture and society and will be of great interest to people working in education policy and teacher education.' Annette Patterson, Head of the School of Cultural and Language Studies in Education, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
'Rethinking the Education Improvement Agenda is an important and persuasive book.Over the past quarter of a century or more we have been conditioned to think about school effectiveness and improvement in a strictly functionalist and technical way.In this book Kevin Flint and Nick Peim move beyond the conventional wisdom and encourage us to interpret the field critically and from a broader intellectual perspective. In developing their ideas about 'the enframing', Flint and Peim have given us a book containing a myriad insights that will surely be important in informing not only future research and analysis, but policy and practice as well.' David Hopkins, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Education, University of London, UK
'Rarely does a single book fulfill as many timely functions as Rethinking the Education Improvement Agenda. Not only does it provide a cogent and precisely argued reassessment of the purposes of state education, and its concomitant machinery; along the way Flint and Peim have also produced a powerful introduction to continental philosophy and critical theory, demonstrating how it can be used to lucidly expose policy and practice within the field of education in its often anti-democratic, governmental and anti-educational dimensions. If you ever imagined that the work of Derrida, Heidegger and other writers of that supposed ilk, had nothing to contribute to the state of human knowledge beyond obscurity and self-indulgence, then this very accessible book will be a shocking surprise, as politics, power and theories of knowledge are revealed as being the heart of the education machine.' Paul Moran, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education and Children's Services, University of Chester, UK
'This book offers a profound critique of the 'state' of schooling oriented education. Educationists aiming to fully understand their own thought and practice in the context of work in such a system ought to take the messages of this book on board for the sake of sanity and clarity of thought. It offers a way to rethink the educational project from a point of view cleared of unwarranted and dangerous enthusiasm in the idea of educational improvement. Deeply philosophical, the complex and demanding analysis of what seems, outside of such a philosophical perspective, really quite simple and commonsensical, is submitted to a treatment that at times shines with true brilliance. This is a book for those in education ready to embrace other possibilities and other ways of seeing. It is for those who care enough to think for themselves.' Helen E. Lees, Research Fellow in the Laboratory for Educational Theory, School of Education, University of Stirling, UK
'Rethinking the Education Improvement Agenda is an important and persuasive book.Over the past quarter of a century or more we have been conditioned to think about school effectiveness and improvement in a strictly functionalist and technical way.In this book Kevin Flint and Nick Peim move beyond the conventional wisdom and encourage us to interpret the field critically and from a broader intellectual perspective. In developing their ideas about 'the enframing', Flint and Peim have given us a book containing a myriad insights that will surely be important in informing not only future research and analysis, but policy and practice as well.' David Hopkins, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Education, University of London, UK
'Rarely does a single book fulfill as many timely functions as Rethinking the Education Improvement Agenda. Not only does it provide a cogent and precisely argued reassessment of the purposes of state education, and its concomitant machinery; along the way Flint and Peim have also produced a powerful introduction to continental philosophy and critical theory, demonstrating how it can be used to lucidly expose policy and practice within the field of education in its often anti-democratic, governmental and anti-educational dimensions. If you ever imagined that the work of Derrida, Heidegger and other writers of that supposed ilk, had nothing to contribute to the state of human knowledge beyond obscurity and self-indulgence, then this very accessible book will be a shocking surprise, as politics, power and theories of knowledge are revealed as being the heart of the education machine.' Paul Moran, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education and Children's Services, University of Chester, UK
'This book offers a profound critique of the 'state' of schooling oriented education. Educationists aiming to fully understand their own thought and practice in the context of work in such a system ought to take the messages of this book on board for the sake of sanity and clarity of thought. It offers a way to rethink the educational project from a point of view cleared of unwarranted and dangerous enthusiasm in the idea of educational improvement. Deeply philosophical, the complex and demanding analysis of what seems, outside of such a philosophical perspective, really quite simple and commonsensical, is submitted to a treatment that at times shines with true brilliance. This is a book for those in education ready to embrace other possibilities and other ways of seeing. It is for those who care enough to think for themselves.' Helen E. Lees, Research Fellow in the Laboratory for Educational Theory, School of Education, University of Stirling, UK