Neoliberalism and the new right view of education

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10 Terms

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neoliberalism and the new right

  • Neoliberal perspectives, also called the New Right, view education through an economic lens

    • They see schools as part of a system that should promote competition, choice, and efficiency

    • Schools should focus on raising standards to meet the needs of the global economy

    • They advocate for greater marketisation, where schools compete like businesses and parents act as consumers

      • Competition improves standards and efficiency

    • Underperforming schools should lose funding or be taken over, while successful ones are rewarded

  • Neoliberals believe that the state interferes too much in people's lives and should instead play a minimal role in society

  • In terms of education systems, the state has failed to provide high-quality education, and its role should be limited to:

    • setting the national curriculum to promote shared values

      • Such as British history, Christian values, and citizenship, to promote social cohesion

    • ensuring a framework for schools to operate in

      • Via Ofsted, league tables, and standardised testing, the state helps monitor school quality while allowing school choice and competition

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chubb and moe

  • American sociologists Chubb and Moe are key New Right thinkers who argue that:

    • state schools have failed to meet the needs of pupils, parents and the economy because:

      • the standard of education is low, especially for disadvantaged groups

      • they have failed to produce workers with the right skills

      • they have led to high levels of unemployment

    • privately run schools in the USA perform better because they are accountable to paying consumers

      • They recommended a voucher system, where parents are given public money to spend on a school of their choice

      • This would force schools to compete, raise standards, and be more responsive to parental demand

      • Chubb and Moe believed this would create a parentocracy—a system driven by consumer power, not government control

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(chubb and moe) the influence on education policy

  • The New Right has had a major impact on UK education since the 1980s:

    • 1980s–1990s: Introduction of vocational education and marketisation

      • This was under the 1988 Education Reform Act

    • 1997–2010: New Labour supported academies and performance targets

      • This shows New Right influence even under centre-left governments

    • 2010–2015: The Coalition government expanded academies and free schools

      • This reinforced privatisation and parental choice

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strength of the new right perspective on education - standards and accountability

  • Focus on standards and accountability

    • By introducing Ofsted inspections, league tables and standardised testing, schools became more accountable for student outcomes

    • These measures have improved results in some failing schools

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strengths of the new right perspective on education - parental choice

  • Promotion of parental choice

    • By giving parents the right to choose, schools have improved in attracting pupils

    • This parentocracy supposedly empowered families and encouraged innovation

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strengths of the new right perspective on education - policy reform

  • Influential policy reforms

    • New Right thinking has led to the creation of academies and a focus on traditional teaching

    • These reforms have led to higher exam results in some disadvantaged areas

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weaknesses of the new right perspective on education - reproduction of inequality

  • Reproduction of inequality

    • Marxists argue that middle-class parents are better able to exercise school choice due to their economic and cultural capital

    • This reinforces social class divisions

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weaknesses of the new right perspective on education - high performing students favoured

  • Marketisation favours high-performing students

    • Schools are incentivised to 'cream-skim' the most able students and discriminate against those who require extra support

    • This creates a two-tier system and undermines the idea of equality of opportunity.

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weaknesses of the new right perspective on education - ethnocentric and narrow curriculum

  • Ethnocentric and narrow curriculum

    • The National Curriculum is criticised for reflecting a white, middle-class, Eurocentric view of British history and culture

    • This fails to represent the diversity of UK society and may marginalise ethnic minorities and working-class students

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weaknesses of the new right perspective on education - profit over pupils

  • Profit over pupils

    • The increasing role of private providers in education raises concerns about the commodification of learning

    • Marxists argue that when companies prioritise profit, educational quality and student welfare can suffer