Críticas:
This is a timely and stimulating collection that I am glad to report is but one instalment in a from the perspective of this reviewer at least much needed ongoing project to develop and profile radical critical interventions in contemporary educational issues and policy trends. The editors Satterthwaite, Atkinson and Martin together with all of the contributors and Trentham Books are to be congratulated for their ongoing work and important contribution to making the voice(s) of critical pedagogy heard afresh in the UK. I recommend it unreservedly. --Mr Mark Mason, University College Chichester, Escalate, November 2005
Reseña del editor:
This book is a call to educators everywhere to recognize and resist the global forces which are driving educational policy deeper and deeper into narrow discourses of performance, accountability and 'certainties' about what works. It explores government control over educational practice and research in the US and the UK, and examines the impact of this control on teachers and learners.Ian Stronach and Patti Lather open with searing critiques of the effects of current government policy on educational research - and by implication educational practice - in the UK and the US, while Mike Newby focuses specifically on the struggle over the control of initial teacher education in the UK over the last decade. The second section offers four case studies of the effects of this control. Three chapters explore the undermining of professional autonomy: Sue Clegg and Peter Ashworth consider the narrowing effects of the language of 'learning outcomes'; James Avis critiques the punitive inspection regimes currently operating in education; Valerie Reardon compares these regimes to the sanitization of the female body; and Pat Sikes and John Clark examine autonomy and control in a school for students with 'emotional and behavioral disorders', and seek ethical ways of representing the experience of both the teachers and the learners.The final section of the book reviews issues arising from current widening participation policies in the UK. Kathryn Ecclestone writes about the effect of 'therapeutic education' on the self esteem of adult learners; Sandra Sinfield, Tom Burns and Debbie Holley consider how the policing and control of student experience undermines the trust between tutor and student; and Julie Evans and Wendy Martin, focusing on the narratives of mature students, ask in whose interest the widening participation agenda is being pursued. Finally, Roger Harrison and Tamsin Haggis examine the metaphors of learning employed by adult learners and by the policymakers whose decisions shape their experience.This is a book for educational researchers, policymakers and practitioners -- especially those working with adult learners - who want to see beyond the apparent inevitability of current ways of conducting education. It will be of value to students in education, policy studies and professional training, and of particular benefit to those delivering, undertaking or researching education and training in post-compulsory education at all levels.
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