05417nam 2200601 a 450 991082185450332120200520144314.094-6091-861-110.1007/978-94-6091-861-2(CKB)2670000000281365(EBL)3034738(SSID)ssj0000878575(PQKBManifestationID)11474942(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000878575(PQKBWorkID)10837161(PQKB)11220495(DE-He213)978-94-6091-861-2(MiAaPQ)EBC3034738(OCoLC)827212323(nllekb)BRILL9789460918612(MiAaPQ)EBC1083740(Au-PeEL)EBL3034738(CaPaEBR)ebr10614805(Au-PeEL)EBL1083740(PPN)168342839(EXLCZ)99267000000028136520130105d2012 uy 0engurnn|008mamaatxtccrCanadian education governing practices & producing subjects /edited by Brenda L. Spencer ... [et al.]1st ed. 2012.Rotterdam Sense Publishers20121 online resource (153 p.)Description based upon print version of record.94-6091-860-3 94-6091-859-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Preliminary Material /Brenda L. Spencer , Kari Dehli and James Ryan -- Introduction /Brenda L. Spencer , Kari Dehli and James Ryan -- Grade 12 or die /Tannis Atkinson -- Foucault, Authority, and the Possibility of Curriculum Reform in Secondary School Science Education /David Blades -- Partnering Power /Kate Cairns -- Subjectivity and Discipline /Sheila Cavanagh , Cara Ellingson and Brenda L. Spencer -- Understanding the World Bank’s Education for All Policy as Neoliberal Governmentality /Margarete Daugela -- Towards a Genealogy of Academic Freedom in Canadian Universities /Kenneth D. Gariepy -- A Retrospective Look at the Social Construction of ‘Skilled’ Immigrant Workers in Ontario /Michelle P. Goldberg -- Counting In, Counting Out, and Accounting For /Brenda L. Spencer -- About the Contributors /Brenda L. Spencer , Kari Dehli and James Ryan -- Index /Brenda L. Spencer , Kari Dehli and James Ryan.Canadian Education: Governing Practices and Producing Subjects is an absolutely critical volume bridging a number of key areas in Canadian education – classroom politics, schools, teachers’ work, higher education, and much more – with the theoretical contributions of Michel Foucault. The result is illuminating, engaging, and critically provocative. The essays are carefully chosen and utilize Foucauldian concepts such as governmentality, discipline, subjectivity, and genealogy to excellent critical effect. With a skillfully crafted introduction that nicely brings the entire collection into sharp focus, the editors have provided a text that is a must read for critical scholars and students alike. Mona Gleason, Department of Educational Studies, University of British Columbia This excellent text presents a Foucauldian analysis of selected educational practices, contemporary reform initiatives, and current educational policy, in the Canadian context. The authors demonstrate how rich theoretical constructs such as bio-power, governmentality and disciplinary power can illuminate everyday practices and policies, making “the cultural unconscious apparent” (Fouacult, 1989, p. 71). Canadian Education: Governing Practices and Producing Subjects is essentially a hopeful book: it demonstrates the radicalizing role of theory as we try to understand and complicate educational structures and processes. This is an essential text for all those interested in Foucauldian analyses of education and a must read for undergraduate and graduate students in Canadian faculties of education. Anne M. Phelan, University of British Columbia This volume is most useful in the ways in which it achieves a close look and a wide sweep of education policy, its deployment and its effects, as these are embedded in schooling practices, educational strategies, and pedagogy. It offers the ground from which to consider the potential for education to be aimed at the development of a socially just citizenry while also helping to reveal the structures of power and processes of social control that operate within current neoliberal technologies of governmentality. It is against these that reform-minded educators and curriculum and policy developers can set themselves. While theoretically complex and original in its conceptual approach, this book is also practically informative and eminently readable, making it useful to teachers, school administrators, education policy developers, parents, students, and communities at all levels of the schooling spectrum.” Magda Lewis, PhD. Professor and Queen’s National Scholar, Queen’s University, Kingston. Magda Lewis, Ph.D. Professor and Queen’s National Scholar, Queen’s University, Kingston.EducationCanadaEducation370Spencer Brenda L1682688MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910821854503321Canadian education4052985UNINA