Examining Teach For All brings together research focused on Teach For All and its affiliate programmes to explore the organisation’s impact on education around the world. Teach For All is an expanding global network of programmes in more than 50 countries that aim to radically transform education systems by recruiting talented graduates to teach for two years in under-resourced schools and developing them into lifelong advocates of reform. The volume offers nuanced insights into the interests and contexts shaping Teach For All and the challenges and possibilities inherent in broader efforts to enact education reform on a global scale.
This volume is the first of its kind to present empirical research on the emergence and expansion of Teach For All programmes, which replicate and adapt the Teach For America model around the world. The volume traces the network’s expansion from its initial launch in 2007 to its growing international presence, as chapters present new research from national contexts as diverse as Bangladesh, Lebanon, and Spain. Using evidence from a range of perspectives and research methodologies, the chapters collectively highlight the ways in which Teach For All and its affiliate programmes are working to alter educational landscapes worldwide.
This book will be of great interest for scholars, educators, post-graduate students, and policymakers in the fields of comparative education, teacher education, education leadership, and education policy. It paves the way for future critical inquiry into this expanding global network as well as further investigations of educational change around the world.
Author(s): Matthew A.M. Thomas, Emilee Rauschenberger, Katherine Crawford-Garrett
Series: Oxford Studies in Comparative Education
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
List of contributors
Foreword by Fazal Rizvi
List of abbreviations
PART I: Laying the foundation
1. Examining Teach For All: An introduction
2. From Teach For America to Teach First: The initial expansion overseas
3. A growing global network: The development of international research on Teach For All
PART II: Diffusion and adaptation
4. The origin and adaptation of Teach First Norway
5. The Teach For All ‘brand’: Exploring TFA’s successful transferability through case studies of Teach South Africa and Teach First
6. Bringing a global model to the Lebanese education context: Adaptation or adoption?
PART III: Politics and policies
7. Teach For Bangladesh as a de facto social enterprise: What is it and where is it going?
8. Mobilising the philanthropic neoliberalisation of Teach For All in Spain
9. Teacher educators and the pedagogical and curriculum complexity of Teach For All in Australia
10. Teach First Cymru: Whose mission? Teach First and the Welsh Government’s ‘National Mission’ for education
PART IV: Teaching and leading
11. Imagining and realising ‘good quality education’: Capital mobilisation by elite graduates of prestigious universities teaching in rural Chinese schools
12. Professional duties and support for Teach For All fellows as reported by school principals: A case study of two European countries
13. Unpacking Teach For All’s conceptualisation of leadership through the ‘Teach For All Talks’ series
PART V: Conclusion
14. Final thoughts on Teach For All: From where and where to?
Index