Reclaiming a future that has not yet been: The Faure report, UNESCO’s humanism and the need for the emancipation of education

被引:0
作者
Gert Biesta
机构
[1] Maynooth University,Centre for Public Education and Pedagogy
[2] University of Edinburgh,Moray House School of Education and Sport
来源
International Review of Education | 2022年 / 68卷
关键词
Faure report; UNESCO; humanism; technicism; emancipation; learning society; permanent education;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fifty years after UNESCO’s publication of Learning to be: The world of education today and tomorrow, the author of this article provides an assessment of this seminal report, commonly known as “the Faure report”. He characterises the educational vision of the report as humanistic and democratic and highlights its emphasis on the need for educational provision throughout the life-course. He demonstrates how the right to education has, over time, been transformed into a duty to learn, Moreover, this duty has been strongly tied to economic purposes, particularly the individual’s duty to remain employable in a fast-changing labour market. Rather than suggesting that Edgar Faure and his International Commission on the Development of Education set a particular agenda for education that has, over time, been replaced by an altogether different agenda, the author suggests a reading of the report which understands it as making a case for a particular relationship between education and society, namely one in which the integrity of education itself is acknowledged and education is not reduced to a mere instrument for delivering particular agendas. Looking back at the report five decades later, he argues that it provides a strong argument for the emancipation of education itself, and that this argument is still needed in the world of today.
引用
收藏
页码:655 / 672
页数:17
相关论文
共 8 条
[1]  
Biesta G(2006)What’s the point of lifelong learning if lifelong learning has no point? On the democratic deficit of policies for lifelong learning European Educational Research Journal 5 169-180
[2]  
Biesta G(2012)Have lifelong learning and emancipation still something to say to each other? Studies in the Education of Adults 44 5-20
[3]  
Biesta G(2015)Resisting the seduction of the Global Education Measurement Industry: Notes on the social psychology of PISA Ethics and Education 10 348-360
[4]  
Biesta G(2020)Perfect education, but not for everyone: On society’s need for inequality and the rise of surrogate education Zeitschrift Für Pädagogik 66 8-14
[5]  
Fredriksson U(2003)Changes of education policies within the European Union in the light of globalisation European Educational Research Journal 2 522-545
[6]  
Jessup G(1973)L’Education permanente. Education 5 16-25
[7]  
Jones HC(2005)Lifelong learning in the European Union: Whither the Lisbon Strategy? European Journal of Education 40 247-260
[8]  
Säfström CA(2019) and the search for freedom in the educational formation of the public of today Journal of Philosophy of Education 53 607-618