After the marketplace: evidence, social science and educational research


Autoria(s): Luke, Allan
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

This paper is an essay on the state of Australian education that frames new directions for educational research. It outlines three challenges faced by Australian educators: highly spatialised poverty with particularly strong mediating effects on primary school education; the need for intellectual and critical depth in pedagogy, with a focus in the upper primary and middle years; and the need to reinvent senior schooling to address emergent pathways from school to work and civic life. It offers a narrative description of the dynamics of policy making in Australia and North America and argues for an evidence-based approach to social and educational policy – but one quite unlike current test and market-based approaches. Instead, it argues for a multidisciplinary approach to a broad range of empirical and case-based evidence that subjects these to critical, hermeneutic social sciences. Such an approach would join educational policy with educational research, and broader social, community and governmental action with the aim of reorganising and redistributing material, cultural and social resources.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37343/

Publicador

Australian Association for Research in Education

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37343/1/30020i.pdf

http://www.aare.edu.au/aer/online/30020i.pdf

Luke, Allan (2003) After the marketplace: evidence, social science and educational research. AER (Australian Educational Researcher), 30(2), pp. 87-108.

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130000 EDUCATION #130300 SPECIALIST STUDIES IN EDUCATION
Tipo

Journal Article