ABSTRACT

A Social History of Educational Studies and Research examines the development of the study of education in the UK in its broader educational, social and political context since its early beginnings in the first part of the twentieth century. By providing a historical analysis of the contested growth of the field this book examines the significant contribution that has been made by institutions of higher education, journals, text books, conferences, centres, and academic societies. It discusses the problems and opportunities of the field, and its prospects for survival and adaptation to current changes in the decades ahead. The work draws on documentary sources, social network analysis, and interviews with leading figures from across the field.

 

This book highlights international influences on the development of educational studies and research in the UK, its role in the growing internationalisation of the field as a whole, and also comparisons and contrasts with the nature of the field elsewhere. It relates the development to the wider social, political and economic changes affecting higher education in general and educational studies and research in particular. It addresses the historical development of disciplines in higher education institutions and the nature, extent and limitations of interdisciplinarity.

 

A Social History of Educational Studies and Research discuss the problems and opportunities facing the study of education today, and its prospects of adapting to changes in the decades ahead. It is a distinctive and original analysis of educational studies and research that provides the first comprehensive study of its type.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|19 pages

The Institute of Education London

All the gates of knowledge thrown open?

chapter 4|21 pages

Organising the Field

From the Standing Conference to the British Educational Research Association

chapter 5|29 pages

A Journal for the Field?

The British Journal of Educational Studies

chapter 7|15 pages

An Interdisciplinary Project?

The case of the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies

chapter 8|18 pages

Crisis and Collaboration

chapter 9|17 pages

Crossing Paths?

Educational studies and research in the twenty-first century

chapter 10|4 pages

Conclusions