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Tell, Shawgi – Democracy & Education, 2021
Frenkiewich and Onosko (2020) maintain that American public education has functioned as a pillar of democracy and a force for progress for most of the twentieth century, but they worry that a major turn to school privatization in recent years will undermine the democratic mission and vision of public schooling and harm society as well. The authors…
Descriptors: Public Education, Privatization, Low Achievement, Neoliberalism
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Anderson, Gary – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2017
The Trump administration represents less a break from the Bush and Obama administration education reforms than an expansion of those reforms. I argue that academics have been complicit in these reforms through the depolitization and privatization of their scholarship and their adherence to a technological framework of knowledge production,…
Descriptors: Educational Researchers, Neoliberalism, Role, Educational Change
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Ball, Stephen J. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2017
This paper builds on previous research (Ball, 2012, Ball & Junemann, 2012) to explore some aspects of the embodiment of policy. The author draws on Larner and Laurie's (2010) work on technocratic expertise and how, as she puts it, "privatisation ideas and practices are transferred in embodied forms," and in particular her argument…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Networks, Privatization, Educational Policy
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Lipman, Pauline – Democracy & Education, 2018
This response discusses the complexity of racial segregation in U.S. cities today and an emerging education movement for equity and racial justice. Racial segregation has been and continues to be a potent, and contested, strategy of containment, subordination, and exploitation, but African Americans have also, out of necessity, turned racial…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, African Americans, Racial Bias, Community Schools
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Gross, Steven Jay; Shapiro, Joan Poliner – Values and Ethics in Educational Administration, 2014
Today powerful philanthropies exercise considerable influence over U.S. educational policy. Referred to as venture philanthropies (Scott, 2009; Saltman, 2010), foundations, such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation, have emphasized high-stakes accountability and…
Descriptors: Private Financial Support, Instructional Leadership, Ethics, Educational Policy
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Saltman, Kenneth J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2014
In the United States, corporate school reform or neoliberal educational restructuring has overtaken educational policy, practice, curriculum, and nearly all aspects of educational reform. Although this movement began on the political right, the corporate school model has been heralded across the political spectrum and is aggressively embraced now…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Commercialization, Educational Change, Educational Policy
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Tomlinson, Barbara; Lipsitz, George – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2013
Henry A. Giroux argues that countering the disasters of neoliberalism requires facing "the challenge of developing a politics and pedagogy that can serve and actualize a democratic notion of the social" (2011). The authors suggest that Immanuel Wallerstein's notion of "middle-run" temporality (2008) and Stuart Hall's discussion of "middle-level"…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Instruction, Privatization, Race
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Means, Alexander – Journal of Inquiry and Action in Education, 2014
This essay critiques the ideological assertions of corporate school reform and discusses how these logics perpetuate failure in urban education. Drawing on theories of neoliberal urbanism, the right to the city, and the commons, the essay argues that educational researchers and advocates need to reframe the values of urban education in line with a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Urban Education, Democratic Values
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Dotts, Brian W. – Educational Foundations, 2015
The idea of breaking free from outdated ideas and practices is nothing new. It is an idea advocated by individuals like Aristotle, Thomas Paine, and Thomas Jefferson. In 1935 Dewey asserted that he viewed education and schooling as the ideal setting for democracy's gestation. He believed that a democratic way of life could best be achieved by…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Public Education
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Andelora, Jeffrey T. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2013
In the author's fifteen years as a subscriber to "TETYC," he has yet to read an article as alarming as Keith Kroll's "The End of the Community College English Profession." His argument that neoliberalism--a political ideology and set of economic policies that look to the free market and privatization for answers to questions great and small--is…
Descriptors: Governance, Community Colleges, Ideology, Free Enterprise System
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Gabbard, David – Democracy & Education, 2013
Opponents of the neoliberal privatization of schools must be cautious in formulating their opposition so as not to situate themselves as the defenders of an otherwise indefensible status quo. Though we might expect professors in traditional university-based educational-leadership programs to protect their institutional self-interests and their…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Training, Neoliberalism
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Quantz, Richard – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2006
In this three-part paper, Richard Quantz proclaims that it was the spirit of the free school movement that originally attracted him to the social foundations of education and to the philosophy of education. He wonders what has happened to the progressive movement--the one that embraced Ivan Illich's call to "deschool society" and called…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Progressive Education, Educational Trends, Educational Philosophy