This volume brings together an international set of contributors in education research, policy and practice to respond to the influence the noted academic Professor Michael Young has had on sociology, curriculum studies and professional knowledge over the past fifty years, and still has on the field to this day. It provides a critical analysis of his work and the uses to which it has been put in the UK and internationally, discussing implications for debates on the purpose of education and how school curricula, as well as programmes in other educational settings, could be run and teaching undertaken, based on his contribution. Following Michael’s long and distinguished career – dating back to before Knowledge and Control: New Directions for the Sociology of Education, which Michael edited in 1971 – recent years have seen an upsurge in both academic and policy interest in his work, including the new concern he expressed for knowledge in his 2007 book Bringing Knowledge Back In. The book concludes with an appreciation and a response to the authors from Michael Young and a Coda from Charmian Cannon, who was on the Institute of Education panel that appointed Michael to his post in 1967. This timely book is a unique critique and celebration, written by experts whose own careers have been affected by Michael, and will appeal to all those with an interest in the work of Michael Young.
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This volume brings together an international set of contributors in education research, policy and practice to respond to the influence the noted academic Professor Michael Young has had on sociology, curriculum studies and professional knowledge over the past fifty years.
Les mer
1. Consistency, contradiction and ceaseless enquiry in the work of Michael Young Section 1: Sociology of Education 2. Taking subject knowledge out and putting it back in again? A journey in the company of Michael Young 3. The New Organon of Michael Young 4. ‘Beyond the present and the particular’: Similarities and differences between Michael Young’s and Charles Bailey’s arguments for the public provision of liberating forms of education for all 5. Powerful sociological knowledge? An analysis of the British Sociological Association and the sociology school curriculum in England 6. A Durkeimian approach to knowledge and democracy 7. What is educationally worthwhile knowledge? Revisiting the case for powerful knowledge 8. Michael Young’s influence on the sociology of education Section 2: Curriculum Studies 9. Michael Young and the crises of capitalism 10. The curriculum arguments of Michael Young and John White 11. The road to Future 3: The case of geography 12. Powerful knowledge and the formal curriculum 13. Powerful knowledge – moving us all forwards or backwards? 14. ‘Making’ and ‘taking’ problems: The curriculum field and Michael Young Section 3: Professional/Vocational Knowledge and Education 15. Professional knowledge in the 21st century: ‘Immaterial’ labour and its challenge for the ‘trinary’ 16. From the ‘general’ to the ‘organic’ intellect: Reflections on the concepts of specialization and the curriculum of the future 17. Learning from qualification reform: The value and limitations of the notion of powerful knowledge 18. Theorising the conditions for theoretical knowledge in vocational education 19. Conceptualising vocational knowledge: The high road and the middle road Section 4 20. An appreciation and a response 21. Coda
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781138675834
Publisert
2017-08-10
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
292

Biographical note

David Guile is Professor of education and work at the UCL Institute of Education, University of London, UK.

David Lambert is Professor of geography education at the UCL Institute of Education, University of London, UK.

Michael Reiss is Professor of science education at the UCL Institute of Education, University of London, UK.