Article
Details
Citation
Robinson S (2011) Diluting education? An ethnographic study of change in an Australian Ministry of Education. Discourse, 32 (5), pp. 797-807. https://doi.org/10.1080/01596306.2011.620760
Abstract
This ethnographic study captures the processes that led to change in an Australian public education system. The changes were driven by strong neo-liberal discourses which resulted in a shift from a shared understanding about leading educational change in schools by knowledge transfer to managing educational change as a process, in other words, allowing the schools to decide how to change. Inside an Australian state education bureaucracy at a time when the organisation was restructured and services decentralised, this study helps show some of the disturbing trends resulting from the further entrenchment of neo-liberal strategies. Although control was re-centralised by legitimising performance mechanisms, in the form of national testing, there are indications that the focus on national tests may have alarming consequences for the content and context of education. I argue that the complexities of learning and fundamental pedagogies are being lost in preference for an over reliance on data systems that are based on a shallow and narrow set of standardised measures.
Keywords
neo-liberalism; testing; decentralisation; learning; pedagogy; Educational change Australia; Educational planning Australia
Journal
Discourse: Volume 32, Issue 5
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2011 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/3396 |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis (Routledge) |
eISSN | 2040-3674 |