How Policies of Priority Education Shape Educational Needs: New Fabrications and Contradictions
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Publication date
2011ISSN
0895-9048
Abstract
This article aims to interpret how different policies of priority education deal
with the notions of “educational needs” and “educational inequalities.” Indeed,
it is the processes and mechanisms embedded in the deployment of such
policies that ultimately model a category of educational need that goes beyond
the conceptualization of educational inequality used to justify the policies
themselves. The authors reach this conclusion by examining four European
programs of priority education (PPE). Two basic tendencies are identified. On
the one hand, recent deployment of the English and French initiatives seems
to be altering the formulation of problems they are designed to address by
enhancing in practice a decontextualized notion of individual educational
need in which it is considered legitimate to intervene. On the other hand, the
Catalan and Dutch programs, which theoretically address both territorial and
nonformal educational inequalities, in fact apply prioritization schemes and
interventions mainly based on school-based social measures.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Igualtat d'oportunitats educatives
Pages
40 p.
Publisher
Sage
Citation
Alegre, M.A, Collet Sabé, J., & Gonzalez, S. (2011). How Policies of Priority Education Shape Educational Needs: New Fabrications and Contradictions. Educational Policy, 25(2), 299-337.
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