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  1. Exopedagogy: On pirates, shorelines, and the educational commonwealth.Tyson E. Lewis - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (8):845-861.
    In this paper, Tyson E. Lewis challenges the dominant theoretical and practical educational responses to globalization. On the level of public policy, Lewis demonstrates the limitations of both neoliberal privatization and liberal calls for rehabilitating public schooling. On the level of pedagogy, Lewis breaks with the dominant liberal democratic tradition which focuses on the cultivation of democratic dispositions for cosmopolitan citizenship. Shifting focus, Lewis posits a new location for education out of bounds of the common sense of public versus private, (...)
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  • ‘In numbers we trust’: Statistical data as governing technologies in the era of student achievement and school accountability.Jonghun Kim - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9):1442-1452.
    This study examines the Programme for International Student Assessment, one of the most influential tools of global education reform discourses in the 21st century. The study focuses on the governing role of statistical data in the discourse constructed by the international comparative assessment, referring to the global educational governance of the OECD. Disturbingly, the systematic collection and distribution of data does not merely quantify student achievement. Rather, students and participating countries are also qualified and classified. Here, OECD’s PISA statistics act (...)
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  • Exopedagogy: On pirates, shorelines, and the educational commonwealth.Tyson E. Lewis - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (8):845-861.
    In this paper, Tyson E. Lewis challenges the dominant theoretical and practical educational responses to globalization. On the level of public policy, Lewis demonstrates the limitations of both neoliberal privatization and liberal calls for rehabilitating public schooling. On the level of pedagogy, Lewis breaks with the dominant liberal democratic tradition which focuses on the cultivation of democratic dispositions for cosmopolitan citizenship. Shifting focus, Lewis posits a new location for education out of bounds of the common sense of public versus private, (...)
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