Postmodernism and Community in Schools: Unraveling the Paradox
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Educational Administration Quarterly
- Vol. 34 (3) , 298-328
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0013161x98034003003
Abstract
This article addresses the paradox of community building in schools characterized by diversity, posing it as the dissonance between modernist notions of community and postmodernism. The article attempts to unravel the paradox through a theoretical alignment of these concepts. A framework for postmodernism as descriptive social theory, nonnative/constructive social theory, and oppositional/deconstructive social theory is used to analyze community; a nested model for community possibilities in postmodern times is presented; and a concept of postmodern community for schools is explored. The implications of postmodern community for schools are discussed.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Theory and Practice of School CommunitiesEducational Administration Quarterly, 1997
- Complexities and Paradoxes of Community: Toward a more Useful Conceptualization of CommunityEducational Administration Quarterly, 1997
- Exploring the Impact of Reform on School-Enrollment Policies in EnglandEducational Administration Quarterly, 1997
- Diversity, Choice, and Selection in England and WalesEducational Administration Quarterly, 1997
- Science and Theory in the Practice of Educational Administration: A Pragmatic PerspectiveEducational Administration Quarterly, 1996
- Inquiry in Educational Administration and the Spirit of the TimesEducational Administration Quarterly, 1996
- Democratic Communities, Equity, and Excellence: A Deweyan Reframing of Educational Policy AnalysisEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1994
- Professionalism, Democracy, and Discursive Communities: Normative Reflections on RestructuringAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1993
- Moral LeadershipNASSP Bulletin, 1992
- The Ideal of Community and the Politics of DifferenceSocial Theory and Practice, 1986