
For Nearly Two Hundred Years The Organisational Form Of The School Has Changed Little. Bureaucracy Has Been Its Enduring Form. The School Has Prepared The Worker For The Factory Of Mass Production. It Has Created The 'mass Consumer' To Be Content With Accepting What Is On Offer, Not What Is Wanted. However, A 'revised' Educational Code Appears To Be Emerging. This Practice Centres Upon The Concept Of 'personalisation', Which Operates At Two Levels: First, As A New Mode Of Public Service Delivery, And Second, As A New 'grammar' For The School, With New Flexibilities Of Structure And Pedagogical Process. Personalisation Has Its Intellectual Roots In Marketing Theory, Not In Educational Theory And Is The Facilitator Of 'education For Consumption'. It Allows For The 'market' To Suffuse Even More The Fabric Of Education, Albeit Under The Democratic-sounding Call Of Freedom Of Choice. Education And The Culture Of Consumption Raises Many Questions About Personalisation Which Policy-makers Seem Prone To Avoid:-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates how the shift toward 'personalization' in educational policy serves as a mechanism for integrating market-driven consumer culture into the traditional school system. David A. Hartley, an academic specializing in educational policy and sociology, examines the historical persistence of bureaucratic school structures and their transition into modern, market-oriented models. He argues that current reforms, often framed as democratic choices, actually function to prepare students as consumers rather than citizens, drawing on marketing theory rather than pedagogical research to reshape the classroom environment.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the field of educational sociology recognize this text as a critical intervention in the debate over school reform and marketization. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous challenge to contemporary policy trends.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2012-01-01
Publisher:
Routledge
ISBN-10:
0203817680
ISBN-13:
9780203817681
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