Session Information
28 SES 02, Getting out from Methodological Nationalism
Paper Session
Contribution
This paper offers a contribution to the analysis of the ongoing construction of a European space of education policy. In particular the work addresses the case of recent trends in education policy in four southern Italian regions that are part of the Convergence Objective. In these contexts, the European Social Fund (ESF) has become in recent years the main source of funding to promote innovation in the field of education. In the last decade, the Italian Ministry of Education has used these funds to launch pilot initiatives in the field of evaluation, special projects to tackle educational inequalities and policies to innovate organization, didactics and pedagogies and enrich educational provision. Many of these initiatives are considered as pilot experience to be extended at the national level to modernize Italian schooling and to match the requirements of international institution such as the EU and the OECD. Despite the official rhetoric that enlists the ‘socially just’ purposes of these policies, this flow of money has opened up a field of struggle where conflicting discourses confront each other and possibilities for thinking and acting about education are disclosed and/or inhibited.
Using the studies in governmentality and the analytics of government as sensitizing interpretative framework, we analyse this contested policy trajectory as a field of struggles looking at: a) the ongoing construction of new regimes of truth on the purposes, means and functioning of education and their clashes with the welfarist legacies; b) the establishment of new technologies as obligatory passage points in the daily functioning of education; c) the enactment of new processes of subjectivation that imply the redesign of the key subjects of education (i.e. teachers, head teachers, students, relevant stakeholders); d) the diverse processes and relations by which these discourses, technologies and subjectivities are assembled into relatively stable forms of organization and institutional practice.
Method
Expected Outcomes
References
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