An investigation of high school teachers’ experiences and perceptions of the influence of neoliberalism in the Canadian school systems

Neoliberalism is a socio-political economic movement spreading over the world, supported by an institutional framework, and influencing many spheres, including education. There is an impact on the purpose of education, the role of teachers and teaching. In the Canadian context, there are many indica...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paradis, A. (Audrey)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Oulu 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:oulu-201308241627
Description
Summary:Neoliberalism is a socio-political economic movement spreading over the world, supported by an institutional framework, and influencing many spheres, including education. There is an impact on the purpose of education, the role of teachers and teaching. In the Canadian context, there are many indicators of these influences being felt. In this thesis, neoliberalism is not only considered as a political philosophy, it is also extensively examined as a part of the social imaginary of people, giving neoliberalism the status of ‘common sense’ rather than ideology. In this way, it becomes ‘normal’ to expect the system to work following neoliberal principles, and to find neoliberal solutions to problems — even in spheres that it had previously never impacted. This thesis investigates high school teachers’ experiences and perceptions of the influence of neoliberalism in the Canadian school systems. In so doing, the main aim is to give a voice to teachers, so they can describe their experiences regarding neoliberal influences, in order to identify the problems as they perceive them. The study establishes how neoliberalism affects their work, their identity as professionals and the purpose of education. This research is a phenomenographic study, using Skype interviews from seven high school teachers having worked in Yellowknife, the capital city of Northwest Territories. The analysis identified an outcome space where teachers’ experiences and perceptions were associated with neoliberal influences on education. A discrepancy between the rather liberal ideals and the neoliberal reality of the teachers was described as a problem. The corporate way of managing education was experienced as detrimental. Economy based agendas, and accountability for teachers were felt to be especially harmful. Neoliberal norms such as efficiency, competition, image, measurement, labels and performance were all perceived as negative influences on the profession and on education in general. The thesis considers how the neoliberal social imaginary ...