Educational Territories and Schools that Go Global. The Case of IB Schools and the Emergence of New Territorialities
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Mayer, Liliana
Gottau, Verónica
Fecha:
2022Resumen
Over the last three decades, education privatization has become a global
phenomenon with different manifestations in each country. In Argentina,
it unfolds in a variety of ways, with a diversified educational offering that
allows for free choice at its center (Gottau & Moschetti, 2015; Narodowski,
Moschetti & Gottau, 2017; Gottau, 2020; Mayer, 2020). A subsidized private
sector that expands religious education to generally low- income sectors
is one that benefits the most from this policy (Gamallo, 2015;
Moschetti, 2018), while the latecomers are non- subsidized private
schools that cater to high- income sectors with several institutions having
adopted the Diploma Program (DP) of the International Baccalaureate
(IB), within the frame of the internationalization of education (Mayer &
Catalano, 2018, Mayer, 2019, 2020). It could be argued that as well as the
privatization processes in Argentina tending to form a diversified educational
proposal divergent from the state monopoly provision of the early
20th century, nowadays we can identify different institutional projects
that show strong anchors toward the global and international arenas,
even recognizing the centrality of the nation state in terms of national
Curricula and local legislations (Tedesco, 1986; Bertoni & Rock, 2001;
Grimson, 2002; Narodowski, 2002; Gottau & Moschetti, 2015).
Este documento es el Capítulo 14 del libro Monkman, K., & Frkovich, A. (Eds.). (2022). Belonging in changing educational spaces : Negotiating global, transnational, and neoliberal dynamics. Taylor & Francis Group.
URI:
https://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/13099https://utdt.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/54UTDT_INST/i9blsq/cdi_informaworld_taylorfrancisbooks_10_4324_9781003219033_18_version2