by HughLauder (Editor), Cathy Wylie (Series Editor), Cathy Wylie (Series Editor), Hugh Lauder (Editor)
The editors have compiled this critical and comparative study of changes which took place in the New Zealand education system in the second half of the twentieth century. For other Western societies who have felt the impact of New Right policies the New Zealand case is interesting because it provides some indication of how policies of decentralization in education might be used to develop egalitarian and democratic educational policies.
In recent years there have been major changes to educational systems in the Western world. Often these changes have been justified by reference to successful educational practices in other countries. However, it is not always possible simply to abstract educational practices from one context and apply them in another successfully. Moreover claims that policies in one country are more successful than those in another have to be treated cautiously: there are always problems in making valid comparisons between the educational performances of different countries. It is important, therefore, that critical and comparative studies are made of educational systems which take full account of the contexts in which they are embedded.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 04 Jul 2014
ISBN 10: 1138008222
ISBN 13: 9781138008229
`Makes an original contribution to educational understanding, and presents its evidence with human generosity and great complexity of detail.' Observer
`A brilliant study of the effect of a grammar-school education on working-class children and their families.' New Statesman
`Deserves the most careful study by politicians, administrators, teachers and parents' Sunday Times