Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Pluralist Publics in Market-Driven Education
View through CrossRef
Pluralist Publics in Market Driven Education opens a conversation on the nature of the public in education systems weary from market driven educational reform. Ruth Boyask observes the characteristic of publicness within contemporary education settings, a characteristic defined by tools from public sphere and democratic education theory. Boyask’s investigations of publicness in educational sites are founded in conceptualising public education as pluralist, unbounded and conditional. These concepts of the public are important for ongoing and future debate on public education.
The settings Boyask examines are different in structure, function and location yet each demonstrates the push and pull between market relations (including competition, efficiency and productivity) and the desire for social equality and democracy in education. Examples of educational settings are drawn broadly from an Anglo-American imaginary that has taken hold in educational systems transnationally, with detailed observation from three research studies of education policy enactment in England. The research studies (including research on curriculum reform in a private democratic school, privatisation of regional educational services and governance in English private schools) provide contexts for examining public accountability, public service and the public good as they relate to a reconceptualised public education. Boyask’s argument is that by opening a conversation about the nature of the public within these sites we bring them into the spheres of a pluralist public education. They become open to public scrutiny and through their debate arise new ideas for challenging market-driven restrictions to contemporary public education. Ruth Boyask is Senior Lecturer at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand, where she does research and teaches on postgraduate programmes in education. Previously, she was Lecturer in Education Studies at the University of Plymouth, UK, and remains a member of Council for the British Educational Research Association.
Title: Pluralist Publics in Market-Driven Education
Description:
Pluralist Publics in Market Driven Education opens a conversation on the nature of the public in education systems weary from market driven educational reform.
Ruth Boyask observes the characteristic of publicness within contemporary education settings, a characteristic defined by tools from public sphere and democratic education theory.
Boyask’s investigations of publicness in educational sites are founded in conceptualising public education as pluralist, unbounded and conditional.
These concepts of the public are important for ongoing and future debate on public education.
The settings Boyask examines are different in structure, function and location yet each demonstrates the push and pull between market relations (including competition, efficiency and productivity) and the desire for social equality and democracy in education.
Examples of educational settings are drawn broadly from an Anglo-American imaginary that has taken hold in educational systems transnationally, with detailed observation from three research studies of education policy enactment in England.
The research studies (including research on curriculum reform in a private democratic school, privatisation of regional educational services and governance in English private schools) provide contexts for examining public accountability, public service and the public good as they relate to a reconceptualised public education.
Boyask’s argument is that by opening a conversation about the nature of the public within these sites we bring them into the spheres of a pluralist public education.
They become open to public scrutiny and through their debate arise new ideas for challenging market-driven restrictions to contemporary public education.
Ruth Boyask is Senior Lecturer at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand, where she does research and teaches on postgraduate programmes in education.
Previously, she was Lecturer in Education Studies at the University of Plymouth, UK, and remains a member of Council for the British Educational Research Association.
Related Results
The Pluralist–Solidarist Debate in the English School
The Pluralist–Solidarist Debate in the English School
In his 1966 essay, “The Grotian Conception of International Society,” Hedley Bull distinguishes between two conceptions of international society: pluralism and solidarism. The cent...
The Legal and Economic Aspects of Gray Market Goods
The Legal and Economic Aspects of Gray Market Goods
The first comprehensive work on the subject, this volume covers all the legal and economic issues raised by gray market goods--genuine trademarked goods manufactured with the autho...
Political Culture in the Age of Trump
Political Culture in the Age of Trump
The Trump presidency alone is a topic of considerable public discussion and debate. Yet, Donald Trump signals much more than the behavior of a single person. He is a symptom and no...
Creating a Market Bureaucracy: The Case of a Railway Market
Creating a Market Bureaucracy: The Case of a Railway Market
The EU expects European governments to abolish their old state railway monopolies and establish a market, with private companies competing for customers. We analyse the long proces...
Adventure Education
Adventure Education
Adventure Education: Theory and Applications allows students to
- get a broad view of adventure education and programming;
- explore the role of games, low- and...
Publics in Action
Publics in Action
Abstract
What does it mean for something to be public? Are we using the same idea of “public” in public education, or public safety, or public works? And how should ...
Achieving Self-Sustainability of Venture Capital Market in Latvia
Achieving Self-Sustainability of Venture Capital Market in Latvia
The research carried out in the Thesis aimed to identify the conditions necessary to achieve a self-sustaining venture capital (VC) market capable of organic growth and to develop ...
Celebrities and Climate Change
Celebrities and Climate Change
Since the mid-2000s, entertainment celebrities have played increasingly prominent roles in the cultural politics of climate change, ranging from high-profile speeches at UN climate...

