Educational markets in space: gamekeeping professionals across Australian communities |
| |
Authors: | Catherine Doherty Barbara Rissman Bronwyn Browning |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. School of Cultural and Language Studies, Faculty of Education, Queensland University of Technology , Brisbane , Australia c.doherty@qut.edu.au;3. School of Cultural and Language Studies, Faculty of Education, Queensland University of Technology , Brisbane , Australia |
| |
Abstract: | This paper argues that the logic of neoliberal choice policy is typically blind to considerations of space and place, but inevitably impacts on rural and remote locations in the way that middle-class professionals view the opportunities available in their local educational markets. The paper considers the value of middle-class professionals’ educational capitals in regional communities and their problematic distribution, given that class fraction’s particular investment in choice strategies to ensure their children’s future. It then profiles the educational market in six communities along a transect between a major regional centre and a remote ‘outback’ town, using publicly available data from the Australian Government’s My School website. Comparison of the local markets shows how educational outcomes are distributed across the local markets and how dimensions of ‘choice’ thin out over the transect. Interview data offer insights into how professional families in these localities engage selectively with these local educational markets or plan to transcend them. The discussion reflects on the growing importance of educational choices as a marker of place in the competition between localities to attract and retain professionals to staff vital human services in their communities. |
| |
Keywords: | class sociology markets space place |
|
|