This book explores democratic possibilities for education after the critique of the impact of neo-liberalism on educational policy and practice. Together, the authors investigate the contours of a ‘new publicness’ of education.
This edited volume refers to well-established critiques that expose how neoliberal governance has normalised the privatisation of public life and undermined the public nature of education. Through historical reconstruction, theoretical exploration, and analyses of educational policies and practices, chapters take a novel approach by investigating democratic possibilities within and beyond the current neoliberal hegemony in education. Covering a range of educational settings – from early childhood education through to higher and professional education – chapters spotlight the Irish educational and political context, as well as exploring international implications.
Ultimately, this book opens up new avenues for discussion around public education and its future, and will therefore be of great interest to researchers and students in the fields of educational theory, education politics, educational policy and democratic education.
Author(s): Carl Anders Säfström, Gert Biesta
Series: Routledge Research in Education
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 201
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
Editors and Contributors
Acknowledgement
1 Introduction: The publicness of education
2 The ‘publicness’ of primary education in Ireland: Tracing its historical lineage
3 The forgotten language of public education: From hope to equality
4 Curriculum: The great public project
5 ‘Publicness’ in pedagogical thinking
6 A new publicness for early childhood education and care in Ireland
7 Claiming a new public education for children with special educational needs
8 New modes of marginalisation: Teachers’ ways of knowing themselves
9 ‘Among Others’: Reinventing initial professional education with student teachers and youth workers
10 Public parents: Reclaiming publicness of education in the new tyrannies
11 Whose school is it anyway? On the insistence of education and the need for the emancipation of the school
12 Expanding the publicness of education: Worlding the world in a time of climate emergency
13 Conclusions: The new publicness of education
Index