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Complexity Theory and the Philosophy of Education

ISBN: 978-1-405-18042-9

October 2008

Wiley-Blackwell

256 pages

Description
A collection of scholarly essays, Complexity Theory and the Philosophy of Education provides an accessible theoretical introduction to the topic of complexity theory while considering its broader implications for educational change.
  • Explains the contributions of complexity theory to philosophy of education, curriculum, and educational research
  • Brings together new research by an international team of contributors
  • Debates issues ranging from the culture of curriculum, to the implications of work of key philosophers such as Foucault and John Dewey for educational change
  • Demonstrates how social scientists and social and education policy makers are drawing on complexity theory to answer questions such as: why is it that education decision-makers are so resistant to change; how does change in education happen; and what does it take to make these changes sustainable?
  • Considers changes in use of complexity theory; developed principally in the fields of physics, biology, chemistry, and economics, and now being applied more broadly to the social sciences and to the study of education
About the Author
Dr. Mark Mason is Associate Professor in Philosophy and Educational Studies in the Faculty of Education at the University of Hong Kong, where he is also Director of the Comparative Education Research Centre (CERC). He has written and edited a variety of books in the field, most recently Changing Education: Leadership, Innovation and Development in a Globalizing Asia Pacific (2007).
Features

  • Explores the relevance of complexity theory – the web of interrelated and contingent factors that
    contribute to particular outcomes or phenomena – to the philosophy and theory of education, to the
    curriculum, and to educational research more broadly
  • Brings together new research by an international contributor team to debate issues ranging from the
    culture of curriculum, to the implications of work of key philosophers such as Foucault and John Dewey
    for educational change
  • Demonstrates how social scientists and social and education policy makers are drawing on complexity
    theory to answer questions on why education decision-makers are so resistant to change; how change in
    education happens; and what it takes to make these changes sustainable