Beyond Rhetoric: How Context Influences Education Policy Advocates’ Success
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v14n7a852Keywords:
Education policy, Neoliberalism, Advocacy, Special education policyAbstract
This article discusses findings from a study of a 22-year campaign to change special education assessment policy in Ontario by the advocacy organization People for Education (P4E) and explains how dominant discourses enabled the government to leave the issue unresolved. Based on a rhetorical analysis of 58 documents, the article identifies strategies used by P4E to persuade Ontario’s government and citizens to view students’ uneven access to educational assessments as a problem. Further, since this problem differently impacts children by class and geographical location, it perpetuates inequities. Despite using strategies deemed effective in other change efforts, arguments mobilized by P4E have not been persuasive in a neoliberal context that champions responsibilized individualism, meritocracy, human capital development, and reduced funding of public services.
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Copyright (c) 2019 Sue Winton, Lauren Jervis
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.