Running head: POLICIES AND PEOPLE
Policies and People: A Review of Neoliberalism and Educational Technologies in P-12 Education Research Bradley Robinson1 University of Georgia
Abstract Neoliberal discourses have come to exert a powerful influence on contemporary education policies and practices across the globe, often in the form of such marketbased reform measures as standardized assessment regimes, charter schools, and voucher programs. There is concern among some scholars that such neoliberal reforms rely heavily on information and communications technologies for their propagation and maintenance under the guise of educational technologies, or edtech. The purpose of this literature review is to examine educational research on the role that information and communications technologies have played in the neoliberalization of education across the globe. In particular, I describe how researchers have made the concept of neoliberalism intelligible by deploying it as a phenomenon for inquiry in relation to educational technologies. I argue that future inquiry must substantiate the broad claims about the effects of neoliberalized educational technologies by engaging more directly with those most affected: teachers and students. Keywords: neoliberalism, educational technology, technology, P-12 education
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Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Bradley Robinson, College of Education, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602. E-mail: brad.robinson@uga.edu