Pedagogy of the Consumer: The Politics of Neo-liberal Welfare Reform (original) (raw)

Vol. 3, No. 2, 2012: Neoliberalism, Pedagogy and the Curriculum: A Global Perspective I. Themed Issue, Andrew Wilkins (ed.)

EDITORIAL Andrew Wilkins: Pedagogy of the consumer: The politics of neo-liberal welfare reform ARTICLES Kevin J. Burke: Strange bedfellows: The new neoliberalism of catholic schooling in the United States Christopher G. Robbins, Serhiy Kovalchuk: Dangerous disciplines: Understanding pedagogies of punishment in the neoliberal states of America Jon Frauley: Post-Social politics, employability, and the security effects of higher education Magnus Dahlstedt, Fredrik Hertzberg: Schooling entrepreneurs: Entrepreneurship, governmentality and education policy in Sweden at the turn of the millennium Susan M. Martin: Education as a spectral technology: Corporate culture at work in Ontario‘s schools Glenn C. Savage: Being different and the same? The paradoxes of ‘tailoring’ in education quasi - markets Panayota Gounari, George Grollios: Educational reform in Greece: Central concepts and a critique

NEGOTIATING NEOLIBERAL EDUCATION: A POSITIONAL ISSUE AND AN OPPOSITIONAL STANCE

This chaptersets out the key principles of neoliberaleducation policies and highlights how these have been entrenched in education via recent policies. The chapter challenges the logic and taken for granted discourse supporting such moves and highlights the need to challenge the furether privatisation and marketisation of education, utilising wide and diverse historical examples of alternative approaches to illustrate potential alternativ pathways. It provides a set of conceptual lenses for rethinking educational alternatives, namely the 5 R's of educational research, and furter develops the concept of refraction to suggest ways to resist and reimagine educational futures. This chapter sets up the following contributions in the edited collection

Neo-liberalism and English education

Turner, David and Yolcu, Hüseyin, (eds.) Neo-liberal educational reforms: a critical analysis. Routledge research in education. Routledge, London, 2014

Neoliberal education? Confronting the slouching beast

Policy Futures in Education

A major aim of this paper is to draw attention to the insidious manner in which the deficit discourse and practices associated with neoliberal reform are de- or re-professionalising educationists through an acculturation process. In the context of Ireland, as elsewhere, the author identifies how the three ‘technologies’ of Market, Management and Performance have inconspicuously but harmfully changed the subjective experience of education at all levels. It is argued that the power of privatisation in service delivery gives rise to change in education as part of a slow burn; how management is altering social connections and power relations to less democratic and caring forms, and how performativity and accountability agendas are radically undermining the professionalism of teachers in the hunt for measures, targets, benchmarks, tests, tables, audits to feed the system in the name of improvement. The paper adopts a personal tenor exhorting all educationists to become increasingly criti...

Neoliberalism and Education Reform

2007

[Winner of the 2008 “Critic’s Choice Award” from the American Educational Studies Association] This book has two primary goals: a critique of educational reforms that result from the rise of neoliberalism, and to provide alternatives to neoliberal conceptions of education problems and solutions. A key issue addressed by contributors is how forms of critical consciousness can be engendered throughout society via schools. This means paying attention to the practical aspects of pedagogy for social transformation and organizing to achieve a most just society. Each contributor offers critical examinations of the pragmatics of pedagogy and organizing for social transformation. It is the editors hope that the analysis of neoliberal educational reform provided in the chapters will contribute in multiple ways to the programs of critical scholars, educators and activists working for education and schools that serve the broad interests of the public and against capitalist educational practices. Contents: Foreword, Richard A. Brosio. Introduction, E. Wayne Ross and Rich Gibson. Neoliberalism and the Control of Teachers, Students, and Learning: The Rise of Standards, Standardization, and Accountability, David W. Hursh. No Child Left Behind, Globalization, and the Politics of Race, Pauline Lipman. Education and the New Disciplinarity: Surveillance, Spectacle, and the Case of SBER, Kevin D. Vinson and E. Wayne Ross. The Ideology and Practice of Empire: The United States, Mexico, and the Education of American Immigrants, Gilbert G. Gonzalez. Neoliberalism and the Perversion of Education, Dave Hill. Schools and the GATS Enigma, Glenn Rikowski. A Marxist Reading of Reading Education, Patrick Shannon. Paulo Freire and the Revolutionary Pedagogy for Social Justice, Rich Gibson. The Unchained Dialectic: Critique and Renewal of Higher Education Research, John Welsh. Marketizing Higher Education: Neoliberal Strategies and Counter-Strategies, Les Levidow. Critical Pedagogy and Class Struggle in the Age of Neoliberal Globalization: Notes from History's Underside. Peter McLaren Author Index. Subject Index.