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Journal ArticleDOI

Re‐imagining and rescripting the future of education: global knowledge economy discourses and the challenge to education systems

Susan L. Robertson
- 01 May 2005 - 
- Vol. 41, Iss: 2, pp 151-170
TLDR
In this paper, the authors used critical discourse analysis as a methodology for analysis, and set out the nature and form of the challenges directed to the compulsory schooling sector by the knowledge economy that is contained in key policy and related documents put out by the OECD, the World Bank and the UK government.
Abstract
Using critical discourse analysis as a methodology for analysis, this paper sets out the nature and form of the challenges directed to the compulsory schooling sector by the knowledge economy that is contained in key policy and related documents put out by the OECD, the World Bank and the UK government. The OECD and the World Bank’s policy agendas are increasingly important in setting policy and programme agendas for the developed and developing countries respectively; however there are important differences between the two institutions regarding how education should be redesigned. The World Bank’s redesign of education favours the market and individualism as the means for developing knowledge and skills for the knowledge economy. The OECD, however, while concerned with human capital formation, rejects the market model in favour of an institutionally embedded liberalism to overcome the problems posed by tacit knowledge. The UK, on the other hand, has promoted the idea of personalized learning. The paper s...

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References
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Analysing Discourse: Textual Analysis for Social Research

TL;DR: Part 1: Social Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Text Analysis 1. Introduction 2. Texts, Social Events, and Social Practices 3. Intertextuality and Assumptions Part 2: Genres and Action 4. Genres 5. Meaning Relations between Sentences and Clauses 6. Discourses 8. Representations of Social Events Part 4: Styles and Identities 9. Modality and Evaluation 11. Conclusion
Book

The coming of post-industrial society

Daniel Bell
TL;DR: The concept of post-industrial society deals primarily with changes in the social structure, the way in which the economy is being transformed and the occupational system reworked, and with the new relations between theory and empiricism, particularly science and technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Origins of Endogenous Growth

TL;DR: The authors describes two strands of work that converged under the heading of "endogenous growth" and argues that the second strand of work will ultimately have a more significant impact on our understanding of growth and our approach to aggregate theory.
Book

The Coming of Post-Industrial Society, a venture in Social Forecasting

Daniel Bell
TL;DR: The coming of the post-industrial society was predicted in this article, where Bell's historical work predicted a vastly different society developing--one that will rely on the "economics of information" rather than the "Economics of goods" and argued that the new society would not displace the older one but rather overlie some of the previous layers.
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Trade and Industry

TL;DR: The hurricane of war and occupation which, after only five days of fighting, swept the Netherlands for fully five years has heavily damaged this country as mentioned in this paper, with the exception of a very small group which turned against the Dutch people in its struggle against suppression and enslavement, a conduct for which they have now to pay the penalty.