The Great American Education-Industrial Complex: Ideology, Technology, and Profit

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Routledge, May 7, 2013 - Education - 200 pages

The Great American Education-Industrial Complex examines the structure and nature of national networks and enterprises that seek to influence public education policy in accord with their own goals and objectives. In the past twenty years, significant changes have taken place in the way various interest groups seek to influence policies and practices in public education in the United States. No longer left to the experience and knowledge of educators, American education has become as much the domain of private organizations, corporate entities, and political agents who see it as a market for their ideas, technologies, and ultimately profits. Piccciano and Spring posit that educational technology is the vehicle whereby these separate movements, organizations, and individuals have become integrated in a powerful common entity, and detail how the educational-industrial complex has grown and strengthened its position of influence. This timely, carefully documented, well argued book brings together Picciano’s perspective and expertise in the field of technology and policy issues and Spring’s in the history and politics of education in a unique critical analysis of the education-industrial complex and its implications for the future.

 

Contents

1 Introduction to the EducationIndustrial Complex and the Power of Networks
1
2 The Flat World as Shaped by the Shadow Elite
15
3 Technology in American Education
42
No Child Left Behind Privatization and Commercialization
63
5 Profits Products and Privatization
90
Policies and Ideas Supporting the EducationalIndustrial Complex
119
News Media Edutainment and the EducationIndustrial Complex
143
A Nation at Risk Redux
167
About the Authors
179
Index
181
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Anthony G. Picciano is Professor and Executive Officer, Ph.D. Program in Urban Education, Graduate Center, and Professor, Hunter College, City University of New York.

Joel Spring is Professor, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York.

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