Analysis of Educational Policies
| Keywords |
| Classification |
Keyword |
| OFICIAL |
Social Studies/Public Policies |
Instance: 2012/2013 - 1S
Cycles of Study/Courses
Teaching language
Portuguese
Objectives
The curricular unit Education Policy Analisys (EPA) aims at providing students with competences to analyse texts, discourses and political processes in education, by identifying the action of the diverse agents in education and their consequences. The Curricular Unit EPA intends to broaden the analysis of the nature of political discourses and practices and to identify their social and educational effects. Having in mind the profile of graduates aimed at, this latter dimension pretends to develop individual, social and professional reflexivity and, by doing so, to create the conditions for the exercise of the ‘sociological imagination’, i.e., the competence to build and to propose alternatives.
Objectives:
- To identify the discursive matrixes of educational discourses
- To relate the social sciences field to the field of educational policy analysis.
- To know theories and methodologies in policy studies in education.
- To identify different methods and techniques of educational policy analysis
- To analyse educational policy texts.
- To analyse the reconfiguration of public institutions, mainly education institutions.
Competencies:
- Identification of the theoretical and methodological implications of the approaches for the policy analysis.
- Identification of the the political ‘themes’ in educational policies.
- Categorization of the arguments driven by schools of political thought.
Learning outomes:
- Performing analyse educational policies.
Program
I. Policy while discourse and text
i. Structuralist and post-structuralist perspectives: language, text, discourse and social reality.
ii The reconfiguration of social, public and educational policies in an era of transition.
II. Theories and methods for education policies study
i. Systems theory; pluralism; Marxism; neoliberalism. The project of social sciences.
ii. Discourse analysis (E. Laclau and C. Mouffe ; N. Fairclough), education policy analysis (J. Codd) and the ‘policy cycle’ (Ball e Bowe).
III. The ‘themes’ of educational policies
i. Classical liberalism (human nature, individualism, propriety and education)
ii. Social-democratic liberalism (the Keynesian consensus about Welfare state and education).
iii. Neoliberalism (the market regulation) - The ‘New Right’ and neoliberalism.
- The Austrian school and the Chicago School (political and methodological individualism).
- Neoliberalism (the Public Choice Theory and the Theory of Agency) and the reconfiguration of educational institutions.
IV. State and society in Portugal – educational policies and education
i. Portugal semi-peripheral position in the world-system and the specificities of Portuguese state.
ii. Educational policies and the development of Portuguese educational system
iii. The reconfiguration of the educational mandate in the context of the knowledge and economy of knowledge.
Mandatory literature
RIZVI, F., & LINGARD, B. ; Globalizing Education Policy, Routledge, 2010
STOER, Stephen R. e MAGALHÃES, António M.; A Diferença somos nós – a gestão da mudança social e as políticas educativas e sociais, Afrontamento, 2005
CODD, John A. ; "The Construction and Deconstruction of Educational Policy Documents", Journal of Education Policy, 3, 3, 235-247, 1988
MAGALHÃES, António M. E, STOER, Stephen R. ; A escola para todos e a excelência académica , Profedições, 2002
PHILLIPS, L. and JORGENSEN, M; Discourse Analysis as Theory and Method, Sage Publications, 2004
OLSSEN, M., CODD, J. and O’NEILL, A.-M. ; Education Policy: Globalization, Citizenship & Democracy, Sage Publications, 2004
Teaching methods and learning activities
Presentations by the teacher, debate, presentations by the sudents. Individual and team work.
Evaluation Type
Distributed evaluation without final exam
Assessment Components
| Description |
Type |
Time (hours) |
Weight (%) |
End date |
| Attendance (estimated) |
Participação presencial |
24,00 |
|
|
| Tutorial meeting (individual and small group) |
Participação presencial |
15,00 |
|
|
| Text analysis |
Teste |
35,00 |
|
|
| Debate |
Participação presencial |
10,00 |
|
|
| Writting short texts |
Teste |
14,00 |
|
|
| Wrinting an article |
Trabalho escrito |
50,00 |
|
|
| Team work |
Teste |
14,00 |
|
|
|
Total: |
- |
0,00 |
|
Eligibility for exams
The students must attend at least 75% of the sessions.
Calculation formula of final grade
The process will develop as follows:
i. Participation in the tasks distributed in each session
ii. Elaboration of a scheme to develop a scientific paper
iii. Writing a 3000 paper (references included) with the following features:
- Identification of a problematic (theoretical introduction/ literature review)
- Identification and justification of a methodology for policy analysis
- analysis of a policy or a corpus of policy texts
- discussion of the results and conclusion
- references
The final mark of the curricular unit is expressed in a 0-20 scale. The implication of the students in the tasks i. and ii. will be evaluated with a maximum of 25% of the 0-20 scale. The paper referred to in iii. will be evaluated with a maximum of 75% of the 0-20 scale.
The final mark is the result of the sum of the two components of the process [(i+ii) + iii] = final mark). The tasks i. and ii. without the final paper will not be evaluated. In this situation, students can use the extra assessment forms.
Special assessment (TE, DA, ...)
The students legally authorised to not attending the sessions will deliver, besides the paper referred to above, two reports on the bibliography about theme 1 and another on about theme 2.
Classification improvement
Those students whishing to improve their evaluation or those who could not meet the regular procedures can (re)write the paper or be submitted to an oral examination about it.