Educating Australia: Government, Economy and Citizen Since 1960This is the first comprehensive history of the Australian education systems, programs and policies in the period since 1960. The book draws on economic and sociological data, key texts and political events, anecdotes and a review of other analyses to build a picture of the role of education programs in the modernization of Australian life. It examines the implications of change for the labor market and the economy, in social policies and in cultural life. An important focus of the book is the discussion of the extension of citizenship through education. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Modern Citizen 19601975 | 9 |
The expansion of education to 1975 | 11 |
The Karmel report and educational equality | 46 |
The Anticitizen 19751990 | 71 |
The New Flight and public policy | 73 |
Individual and government | 100 |
The New Right and education | 119 |
Education and national economic reconstruction | 149 |
Participation and equity | 180 |
Economic government in education | 207 |
The Multicitizen 1990 | 243 |
Civics citizenship and difference | 245 |
259 | |
278 | |
The Economic Citizen 19851995 | 147 |
Other editions - View all
Educating Australia: Government, Economy and Citizen since 1960 Simon Marginson No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
academic achievement argued Australia Australian education Buchanan budget cation cent citizen citizenship civics committee common Commonwealth competition conservatives corporate costs CTEC cultural curriculum Dawkins DEET economic educa education and training education system efficiency egalitarian elite employment enrolments equality of opportunity equity ernment expansion expenditure on education fees financing freedom Friedman government funding government schools groups growth Hayek higher education human capital income increased individual industry institutions Karmel report Keynesian Keynesian economic Labor Government labour market Marginson market liberalism market reform modernisation Monetarism negative freedom nomic OECD organisations outcomes outlays participation political position private schools private sector production programs proportion public choice theory public sector redistribution retention Right role rose secondary skills social sources spending standards student assistance Susan Ryan Table TAFE targeting teachers tertiary education Thatcher tion universal vocational Whitlam