Ulteriori informazioni
Seventy-five years on,
Mapping the Field presents a detailed account of education theory and research, policy, and practice through the lens of some of the key articles published in the journal
Educational Review over this timespan.
Sommario
Foreword: an intellectual history of educational research
Part 1: Theory and methods in educational scholarship 1. Language in a social perspective 2. Phenomenological perspectives and the sociology of the school 3. The sociology of Pierre Bourdieu 4. Challenges facing educational research:
Educational Review Guest Lecture 2005 5. Understanding learning cultures 6. Measuring privatisation in education: methodological challenges and possibilities
Part 2: Politics and policymaking 7. Finding more time for the study of freedom 8. Where stands educational policy towards the poor? 9. Doing things the 'right' way: legitimating educational inequalities in conservative times 10. Global citizenship: abstraction or framework for action? 11. Does addressing prejudice and discrimination through Holocaust education produce better citizens? 12. "Education as the practice of freedom?" - prison education and the pandemic
Part 3: Leadership and management 13. Becoming Career Ambitious: the career strategies of married women who became primary headteachers in the 1960s and 1970s 14. Education policy, distributed leadership and sociöcultural theory 15. How does the new emphasis on managerialism in education redefine teacher professionalism? A case study in Guangdong Province of China 16. Beyond anonymity and the every-day: celebrity and the capture of educational leadership 17. "That would be my red line": an analysis of headteachers' resistance of neoliberal education reforms 18. "Being" a Head of Department in an English University
Info autore
Jane Martin is Professor of Social History of Education at the University of Birmingham, UK. She is Director of the Domus Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Histories of Education and Childhood, and Executive Editor of
Educational Review. Her most recent book is
Gender and Education in England since 1770: A social and cultural history (2022) and is currently writing the biography of author, teacher, and socialist Caroline DeCamp Benn (1926-2000).
Marion Bowl is Honorary Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of Birmingham, UK. She is an academic, teacher and community worker, and Book Reviews Editor of
Educational Review.
Gemma Banks holds numerous roles in academic publishing, including Editorial Administrator for the
Journal of Moral Education, Social Media Manager for the
Journal of Global Security Studies, and Journal Manager of
Educational Review.