Community, Hierarchy and Open Education (RLE Edu L)

£49.99

Community, Hierarchy and Open Education (RLE Edu L)

Moral and social purpose of education

Author: Gary Easthope

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Collection: Routledge Library Editions: Education

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 16th May 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 373 Kb

ISBN: 9781136463136


Introduction

The book describes the English school, especially the secondary school, as a hierarchical community in which the head-teacher (principal) is an autocratic ruler. After explaining how that particular organisation of the school developed historically from the market situation faced by the English public (i.e. private) schools in the developing industrial society of the nineteenth century it provides empirical evidence demonstrating that the hierarchies of knowledge, teachers and students that developed then were still in place when the book was published in 1975. They are still present today.

Challenges to Hierarchical Education

It also looks at the challenges to the school as a hierarchical community presented by the ideologies of deschooling, progressive education and open education. Finally, it provides an explanation of why these ideologies were never put into practice in English schools despite some pioneering exemplars.

Contemporary Questions

Although first published over thirty-five years ago the issues examined in it raise questions that are still central to education today:

Does size of school affect the commitment of teachers to the school, their colleagues and their students?

How can the teaching staff be organised in a school? Do all need to work to the same ends? What is the role of leadership from the head-teacher (principal) in this?

Is it possible to have a curriculum that is open without losing rigour? What should be the relationship between using local community knowledge and the educational wish to extend students’ horizons?

Conclusion

The result is a short, nuanced, and densely argued text that demands thought and reflection from any contemporary educator.

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