In this compelling book, Popkewitz shows how the pressure to produce practical research, to improve social institutions, may actually undermine their ability to produce desirable outcomes, turning scholars into social engineers, harnessed to the existing system and forced to tinker with it in its own terms. David F. Labaree, Stanford University, author of A Perfect Mess
A cautionary tale and an encouraging voice, this book acts as a mirror holding up the history of science and its application in civil society. William F. Tate, Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor in Arts & Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis
Should school reforms be driven by data? Thomas Popkewitz shows here how ineffective and even counterproductive these practical ideals of investigation can be unless informed by cultural understanding and a sense of the historical trajectory that got us to where we now are. Theodore Porter, Distinguished Professor of History of Science at UCLA, author of Trust in Numbers: The Pursuit of Objectivity in Science and Public Life
The book contributes to a broad intellectual program of rethinking the taken-for-granted terms and ideas of education. Showing the historical development of practical-oriented educational research pushes readers to consider a different epistemology regarding knowledge production around teacher education and schooling. Nancy Lesko, Columbia University