Carmen Mills and Trevor Gale take up a problem that Australia keeps trying to avoid: the very unlevel playing field it has created for its schools, its teachers, its students and their parents. This book lets you see how difficult this problem is on the ground, and compels you to think about what would be a better way forward. Professor Lyn Yates , Pro-Vice Chancellor Research from University of Melbourne, Australia
Carmen Mills and Trevor Gale make two important contributions to the sociology of education in this timely book. Through a detailed case study of one disadvantaged school - Crimson Brook Secondary College in rural Australia - they elucidate not only how inequalities are reproduced andlegitimated through many of the practices of schooling, but also the possibilities for policies and practices which interrupt and destabilize such outcomes. In so doing, they also make a significant contribution to Bourdieuian scholarship in their empirically grounded and reflexive application of his 'thinking tools' to their case study and deconstruction of the synchronous productive and reproductive character of schooling practices. Professor Bob Lingard, The University of Queensland, Australia
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