ABSTRACT

This collection of Allan Luke’s key writings on educational policy, curriculum, and school reform follows the development and use of critical discourse analyses to study educational policy and practice. Turning to a series of narrative analyses of the relationship between politics, culture, economics, and education, Luke‘s writings address the challenges of shifting from an academic and scientific critique of policy to ‘getting your hands dirty’ in the making of state educational policy. The volume includes international examples of policy formation for social justice and equity, and closes with an auto-ethnographic view on policymaking and the need for increased critical, sociological evidence-based educational reform.

Together with its companion volume, Critical Literacy, Schooling and Social Justice: The Selected Works of Allan Luke, this collection gathers Luke’s seminal key writings spanning the fields of education, applied linguistics, sociology, and cultural studies for the benefit of scholars, students, teachers, and teacher educators around the world.

chapter 1|46 pages

Text and Discourse in Education

An Introduction to Critical Discourse Analysis

chapter 2|15 pages

Getting Our Hands Dirty

Provisional Politics in Postmodern Conditions

chapter 3|34 pages

The Material Effects of the Word

Apologies, 'Stolen Children' and Public Discourse

chapter 4|20 pages

New Narratives of Human Capital

Recent Redirections in Australian Educational Policy

chapter 5|23 pages

After The Marketplace

Evidence, Social Science and Educational Research

chapter 6|14 pages

Curriculum, Ethics, Metanarrative

Teaching and Learning Beyond the Nation

chapter 7|20 pages

Teaching After the Market

From Commodity to Cosmopolitan

chapter 8|17 pages

Using Bourdieu to Make Policy

Mobilising Community Capital and Literacy

chapter 9|27 pages

Race and Language as Capital

A Sociological Template for Language Education Reform

chapter 10|17 pages

Educating the other

Standpoint and Theory in the Internationalisation of Higher Education

chapter 11|24 pages

Generalizing Across Borders

Policy and the Limits of Educational Science

chapter 12|22 pages

Another Ethnic Autobiography?

Childhood and the Cultural Economy of Looking

chapter 13|9 pages

On the Race of Teachers and Students

A Reflection on Experience, Scientific Evidence and Silence