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El. knyga: Betraying a Generation: How Education is Failing Young People

(University of Greenwich and Visiting Fellow at New College Oxford)
  • Formatas: 148 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: Policy Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781447332138
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 148 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: Policy Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781447332138
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For generations, we have been told that the way to move up in our society is through education. Stay in school, work hard, and you'll go far. But that's no longer true: today's young people study harder but learn less, ending up over-qualified yet underemployed. In this book, Patrick Ainley shows how education in England has been thoroughly compromised by being reoriented, away from learning and towards the economy, with devastating results. Aimed at teachers and students at all levels, the book concludes by suggesting ways that schools, colleges, and universities can instead begin to contribute to a more meaningful and productive society.


Ainley explains how English education is now driven by the economy and politics, having failed to deliver upward social mobility and a brighter future. Concludes with suggestions for positive change.

Recenzijos

"[ Ainley's] book is invaluable for those that would oppose the use of education to further fracture society." Critical Professional Learning "Human capital theory is dead. From those tests for four-year-olds to the clutch of GCSEs, A-levels and degrees, will there be a job at the end and what sort of job in this global economy? This book shows clearly what is really happening and offers some very real solutions." Sally Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, Goldsmiths, University of London "achieves the difficult balance between serving as an introductory text and doing justice to a range of arguments" - Marx & Philosophy Review of Books "Betraying a Generation provides a particularly lucid and authoritative critique of contemporary trends in education and society more broadly - and the far-reaching consequences of such changes for young people in particular." Robin Simmons, Post-16 Educator "Betraying a generation is thorough and comprehensive and will help readers understand key debates about the changing nature of education and work, as well as associated questions about social class, inequality and the economy more generally." British Journal of Educational Studies "The 'betrayal' lies in the lack of understanding. This book remedies this!" Nina Payne, Youth and Community Work graduate "This book decisively debunks the conventional wisdom of neoliberalism and 'human capital' theory and as such is an essential read." Peter Latham, Morning Star "Ever thought school was stupid, college a treadmill, and universities neglected your interest? Have you been propelled towards jobs that either didnt exist or that you wish didnt? If you need to know what is really going on in the education and labour markets, I recommend this book." Danny Dorling, Professor of Geography, University of Oxford "A brilliant book forensic analysis supported by research and evidence to reveal powerfully the present state of education. The book is lucidly written, a scintillating success." Stewart Ranson, Professor Emeritus, University of Warwick

Acknowledgements v
Introduction 1(6)
One From jobs without education to education without jobs
7(22)
The welfare state settlement
7(3)
A golden age?
10(2)
Limited absolute upward social mobility
12(3)
Rising youth unemployment
15(2)
From industrial economy to `knowledge' economy
17(3)
`Education, education, education...'
20(3)
And more education...
23(2)
Summary
25(4)
Two New times
29(14)
Fordism, post-Fordism or neo-Fordism?
29(3)
Fungible labour in a `knowledge economy'
32(3)
`Lovely jobs' and `lousy jobs'
35(1)
Under-skilled or over-qualified?
36(2)
The self-employed society
38(2)
Restructuring the labour market
40(2)
Summary
42(1)
Three Class structure in the 21st century
43(20)
Pyramid or diamond?
44(1)
Or an hourglass with a squeezed middle?
45(4)
Instead, the class structure goes `pear-shaped'
49(3)
So farewell to the middle class?
52(4)
Or farewell to the working class and hello to the precariat?
56(4)
Summary
60(3)
Four Running up a down-escalator
63(26)
The new student experience
64(4)
`Independent state schools'
68(4)
Opportunities to be unequal
72(2)
Redrawing the academic and vocational divide
74(3)
Selection and differentiation
77(2)
Aiming higher?
79(6)
Student or `apprentice'?
85(3)
Summary
88(1)
Five A new politics of education
89(28)
Towards a democratic professionalism
90(6)
And a new youth politics
96(2)
Education in the `second machine age'
98(3)
A good general education for everybody
101(4)
Socially useful education
105(6)
A crisis for youth, not a skills crisis
111(3)
Conclusion
114(3)
References 117(14)
Index 131
Professor of Education at the University of Greenwich and Visiting Fellow at New College, Oxford, Patrick Ainley has taught in schools, colleges and universities, writing on youth and education including From School to YTS (1988) and Lost Generation? (2010).