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Deliberative Educational Planning: Including Educators’ Deliberations in Educational Policy Making

Education Strategy in the Developing World: Revising the World Bank's Education Policy

ISBN: 978-1-78052-276-0, eISBN: 978-1-78052-277-7

Publication date: 12 March 2012

Abstract

The objective of this chapter is to argue a case for the need to include teachers and professional educators in the policy making and implementation processes of the World Bank's Education Sector Strategy 2020. By drawing on evidence from the Consultation Plan, the chapter investigates how communicative practices about teachers are embedded in the discourse of the plan and how these influence the rationalisation of the policy. In doing so, the chapter will examine the relationships between social actions, systems rationalisation and life world rationalisation. Much like commercial and entrepreneurial organisations focus on the voice of the customer (VOC), that is on satisfying the stakeholders and end users in their processes, in this chapter, the voice of the teacher (VOT) is highlighted. The skills and knowledge of key stakeholders need to be leveraged and engaged in order to ensure that the policy achieves its desired aims. In order to frame this argument, notions of Habermas’ communicative action theory is used to show how policy engages in systems steering. Rather than understanding education strategy and reform as a process of engaging only government and policy makers, this chapter suggests that by engaging the practitioners and listening to the practical discourse around reform, teachers can be leaders of reforms rather than obfuscated agents.

Citation

Vongalis-Macrow, A. (2012), "Deliberative Educational Planning: Including Educators’ Deliberations in Educational Policy Making", Collins, C.S. and Wiseman, A.W. (Ed.) Education Strategy in the Developing World: Revising the World Bank's Education Policy (International Perspectives on Education and Society, Vol. 16), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 229-247. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3679(2012)0000016015

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited