Is It Time to Let Meritocracy Go?

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A01=Nadira Talib
Asian Education
Author_Nadira Talib
Category=JNAM
Category=JNF
CDA
CDA Approach
corporatist education policy
critical discourse analysis
Discursive Practices
Diverse Pathways
Education System
educational inequality
Educational Policy
Educational Politics
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
equal educational opportunity
Ethical Political Discourse
Foucault's Archaeological Method
Foucault’s Archaeological Method
Goh Report
High Degree Evaluations
Hyperrealist Structures
Independent Schools
Intransitive
Intransitive Verb
Knowledge Intensive Economy
Lead Education Policies
Malay
Malay population
Meritocracy
Metaphorical Apparatuses
Metaphorical Realism
Metaphorical Relations
Modal Verb
neoliberal policy
Nodal Discourse
Pap Government
philosophical perspectives education
Policy Texts
Secondary Education
Singapore
Singapore education system
Singapore's Education Policy
Singapore's Education System
Singapore’s Education Policy
Singapore’s Education System
social stratification
Southeast Asia
structural inequality Singapore education
systemic bias schools
systemic inequality
Talent Investment

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138320000
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Despite meritocratic claims of equal opportunity, official statistics released by the Ministry of Education, Singapore, reveal that a large segment of the Malay population has sustained the lowest academic achievement from 1987 to 2011. This statistical representation raises the possibility of a politically induced, systemic inequality as a point of investigation.

To investigate this seeming contradiction between the rhetoric and practice of equal educational opportunity, Nadira Talib analyses education policies by drawing on a synthesis of philosophical perspectives and critical discourse analysis as a way of making explicit how the historical constitution of the learner is linked to the legitimisation of inequitable education policies that favour corporatist practices. By making explicit how the underlying assumption of the policy ‘logic’ that increasing expenditure on ‘talents’ must necessarily involve the increasing welfare of everybody is both unsubstantiated and arbitrary, the book presents a moral political problem in demonstrating how education policies are unfounded and unsupported through the idea of meritocracy.

Nadira Talib holds a PhD from The University of Queensland, Australia. She focuses on developing a method of synthesising philosophical deliberations with discourse analysis in analysing social policy. In questioning the systems that separate and divide human beings one from another, her work centres on examining how adhering to the perceived demands of surrealistic political economies is imbricated within the relations of morality and ethics. Her publications are featured in ScienceDaily and in an editorial review of 'The Top 100 Cited Discourse Studies' in the subject area of ‘linguistics and language’, in the years 2015–2019.

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