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Challenging Status Quo Retrenchment
New Directions in Critical Research
von Tricia M. Kress, Curry Mallott, Brad Porfilio
Verlag: Information Age Publishing
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-62396-049-0
Erschienen am 30.10.2012
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B] x 13 mm [T]
Gewicht: 380 Gramm
Umfang: 246 Seiten

Preis: 63,70 €
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Klappentext

This year (2012) marks ten years of No Child Left Behind and the U.S. federal government's official
designation of what qualifies as "scientifically based research" (SBR) in education. Combined, these two
policies have resulted in a narrowing of education via standardization and high stakes testing (Au, 2007) as
well as the curtailment of forms of inquiry that are deemed legitimate for examining education (Wright,
2006). While there has been much debate about the benefits and limitations of the NCLB legislation (e.g.,
Au, 2010) and SBR (e.g., Eisenhart & Towne, 2003), critical researchers have held strong to their position:
The reductionistic narrowing of education curricula and educational research cannot solve the present and
historical inequities in society and education (Shields, 2012). Contrarily, reductionism (via standardization and/or methodological prescription)
exacerbates the challenges we face because it effectively erases the epistemological, ontological, and axiological diversity necessary for disrupting
hegemonic social structures that lie at the root of human suffering (Kincheloe, 2004). Not only has NCLB proven incapable of overcoming
inequalities, but there seems to be sufficient evidence to suggest it was never really intended to eliminate poverty and human suffering. That is, it
seems NCLB, despite its lofty title and public discourse, is actually designed to advance the agenda of handing public education over to for-profit
corporations to manage and privatize thereby intensifying the capitalist class' war on those who rely on a wage to survive (Malott, 2010). In the present
ethos, reductionism upholds and retrenches the status quo (i.e. the basic structures of power), and it puts at risk education and educational research as
means of working toward social justice (Biesta, 2007). Because social justice can be interpreted in multiple ways, we might note that we understand
critical social justice as oriented toward action and social change. Thus, critical education and research may have potential to contribute to a number
of social justice imperatives, such as: redistributing land from the neo-colonizing settler-state to Indigenous peoples, halting exploitative labor relations
and hazardous working conditions for wage-earners, and engaging in reparations with formerly
enslaved communities.