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'Value'ing children differently? Migrant children in education
Author(s)
Date Issued
2013-07
Date Available
2015-06-15T03:00:14Z
Abstract
This paper considers dilemmas around 'value' and the 'valuing' of children and childhood(s) in schools. I argue that in neo-liberal contexts, processes of children's identity making become aligned with the idea of the corporate citizen – value and worth derived from the capacity to produce, excel, self-regulate as well as consume in an ever expanding marketplace. Taking the positioning of migrant children as an exemplar, the paper explores the tensions in pedagogic practices between the valuing of migrant children and their 'added value' that is communicated through spheres of re/action in schools. The paper argues for education that is radical and strategic; careful and nurturing. In its absence, being valued differently involves reproducing negative patterns in a circular dialectical loop that naturalises under achievement of migrant children and other children at risk, to deficiencies in culture and identity.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Children & Society
Volume
27
Issue
4
Start Page
282
End Page
294
Copyright (Published Version)
2013 John Wiley and Sons Ltd and National Children's Bureau
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
valueingchildrendifferently.docx
Size
79.11 KB
Format
Microsoft Word
Checksum (MD5)
903414632575fc42a906bbda0fa64c7f
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