Schooling and the production of social inequalities : what can and should we be doing?


Autoria(s): Mills, Carmen; Gale, Trevor
Data(s)

01/05/2002

Resumo

To speak of an ideal is to lay claim to what ought or should be and to explain 'reality' as deviation. That is, ideals serve to provide direction towards some desired goal as well as judgment about how well a perceived reality approximates that desire. In more recent times, the postmodernist critique has provided its own 'reality check' on modernist ideals, challenging the notion that there is one best way to reach Utopian ends. The emergence of postmodern theories has signalled a general shift in 'the structure of feeling'1 from acquiescence to censure of the universal. But it is not as if there are no postmodern ideals. In these accounts, utopianism is more cogently understood as 'heterotopianisms'. While we are convinced by such critique, that there are diverse goals of value and pathways to reach them, we admit to some uneasiness about a 'postmodern pluralism' in which ideals have die potential to wash away into relativism, where one ideal is as good as the next and ways of achieving them are also equally regarded.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30040811

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Routledge

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30040811/gale-schoolingand-2002.pdf

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17508480209556395

Direitos

2002, Taylor & Francis

Palavras-Chave #school #social inequalities #effective schooling #school communities
Tipo

Journal Article