Volume 33, Issue 1 pp. 5-29

The Marketization of Education: Public Schools for Private Ends

Assistant Professor Lesley Bartlett

Assistant Professor Lesley Bartlett

Teachers College, Columbia University

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Assistant Professor Marla Frederick

Assistant Professor Marla Frederick

University of Cincinnati

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Thaddeus Gulbrandsen

Thaddeus Gulbrandsen

University of New Hampshire

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Assistant Professor Enrique Murillo

Assistant Professor Enrique Murillo

California State University, San Bernardino

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First published: 08 January 2008
Citations: 101

Abstract

This article argues that the neoliberal renaissance of the 1980s marketized education, with distinctly negative social consequences. We examine the emergence and promotion of a national-level discourse that positioned schools in the service of the economy. Based on ethnographic research conducted in North Carolina, we then show how local growth elite utilized this discourse to further their own race and class interests to the exclusion and detriment of poorer, African American parents and students. We suggest that ethnographic studies of policy formation help to socially and historically contextualize contemporary debates and denaturalize unwarranted assumptions about the public good.