Education and Labour Party Ideologies, 1900-2001 and Beyond

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Psychology Press, 2005 - 182 էջ

In 1997 Tony Blair broke with tradition by naming education as a major priority for the General Election Manifesto. In the past, Labour leaders had tended to give education a much lower priority. Despite this, Blair has been greatly criticised for his educational programme 1997-2001. Was he taking education away from traditional labour values of fairness and equality? Was Blair's 'Third Way' just 'Thatcherism in Trousers'?
Denise Lawton approaches such questions by analysing labour education policies since 1900 and shows that from the very beginning the labour Party lacked unity and ideological coherence concerning education. Specifically, there has always been a tension between those like the early Fabians who saw educational reform in terms of economic efficiency, and the ethical socialists whose vision of a more moral society stressed the importance of social justice in education. After an assessment of Labour ideologies in the past, this book concludes with an examination of New Labour and the 'Third Way' in education and suggests some changes that will be necessary in the near future.

 

Բովանդակություն

ideas and contradictions
18
missed opportunities
46
a chance to theorise
53
The Wilson governments 196470
70
Heath and a taste of Thatcher 197074
79
Wilson and Callaghan 197479
88
Thatcherism 197990
100
A Labour education policy found and lost 199097
108
Education education education or targets targets
122
Postscript October 2003
169
Bibliography 12212
179
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Denis Lawton is Emeritus Professor of Education at the Institute of Education, University of London.

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