Complexity theory has become a major influence in
discussions about the theory and practice of education.
This book focuses on a question which so far has
received relatively little attention in such
discussions, which is the question of the politics of
complexity. The chapters in this book engage with this
question in a range of different ways. Whereas some
contributions make a case for the promotion of
complexity in education, others focus more explicitly on
questions concerning the reduction of complexity in and
through education. The chapters do so using theoretical,
historical and empirical arguments, paying attention to
a range of different educational settings (including
early childhood education, school education,
post-compulsory education, lifelong learning and
work-based education), and focusing on different aspects
of these practices (such as curriculum, pedagogy,
assessment, architecture, and management). Taken
together the chapters not only reveal the potential of
complexity for engaging with questions about the
politics of education in new and different ways. They
also provide examples of a more reflexive engagement
with the politics of complexity in education itself. The
book will be of interest to scholars in the fields of
education studies, curriculum studies, curriculum
theory, educational theory, educational policy, and
philosophy of education. It should also be of interest
to practitioners in more specialised fields such as
early childhood education, school education,
post-compulsory education, work-based education and
lifelong learning.
|
|