Skip to main content Site map

Educating for the Knowledge Economy?: Critical Perspectives


Educating for the Knowledge Economy?: Critical Perspectives

Paperback by Lauder, Hugh (University of Bath, UK); Young, Michael (Institute of Education, University of London, UK); Daniels, Harry (University of Bath, UK); Balarin, Maria; Lowe, John

Educating for the Knowledge Economy?: Critical Perspectives

£46.99

ISBN:
9780415615075
Publication Date:
6 Jan 2012
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
252 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 13 - 18 May 2024
Educating for the Knowledge Economy?: Critical Perspectives

Description

The promise, embraced by governments around the world, is that the knowledge economy will provide knowledge workers with a degree of autonomy and permission to think which enables them to be creative and to attract high incomes. What credence should we give to this promise? The current economic crisis is provoking a reappraisal of both economic and educational policy. Policy makers and educationists across the world see education as central to economic competitiveness. However, this book asks fundamental questions about the relationship between the economy and education since, in contrast to policy makers' rhetoric, the relationship between the two sectors is not straightforward. An unorthodox account of the knowledge economy and economic globalisation suggests that autonomy in the workplace and permission to think will be only given to the elite. In this view many aspirant well-educated middle-class young workers are doomed to disappointment. In this book, leading scholars from the US, the UK, Australia and New Zealand discuss these issues and interrogate the assumptions and links between the different elements of education and how they might relate to the economy. Even if we assume that the official view of the knowledge economy is correct, are we educating young people to be autonomous, creative thinkers? Are current policies relating to knowledge, learning and assessment consistent with the kinds of workers and skills required for the knowledge economy? Educating for the Knowledge Economy? will appeal to academics, policy makers, teachers and students interested in the central role of education in the knowledge economy.

Contents

Introduction: 1. Educating for The Knowledge Economy? Critical Perspectives Section I The 'knowledge economy' and Education 2. Globalisation, Crisis and the Political Economy of the International Monetary (Dis)Order 3. The Global Auction, Skill Bias Theory and Graduate Incomes: Reflections on Methodology 4. 'Openness' and the Global Knowledge Commons: An Emerging Mode of Social Production for Education and Science 5. Learning and Contradiction Across Boundaries Section II: Knowledge and the Economy 6. The Educational Revolution and the Transformation of Work 7. Forms of Knowledge and Curriculum Coherence 8. Education, Globalisation and the 'voice of knowledge' 9. The problem with Competency Based Training (and why constructivism makes things worse) Section III: Pedagogy, Assessment, the Demands of the Knowledge Economy and Social Justice? 10. Numbers in Grids of Intelligibility: Making Sense of How Educational Truth is Told 11. Assessing Educational Reform: Accountability, standards and the utility of qualifications 12. School and the Pupils' Work 13. Social Class and School Knowledge: revisiting the sociology and politics of the curriculum in the 21st century

Back

University of Sunderland logo