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Changing communities: international students in local government schools

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journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Ruth ArberRuth Arber
Although fewer than 10% of international students are in the primary and secondary educational sectors, recent figures show the number of these students to have increased exponentially making Australia a leading player in school education provision along with Britain and the United States. The impact of these changes on local schools and the correspondent negotiation of globalising trends on secondary schools alter the ways that identity and difference are understood and played out and the ways that policy and practice in participating schools can be understood At the same time the terms and conditions that define these demands - particularly as they characterize them as marketable commodities. English language and as global and western education need to spelt out and interrogated. In this paper 1 interrogate the ways that community members within local government schools speak about the impact of fee-paying international students on their school. 1 suggest that these discussions are defined by the material and conceptual relations of identity and difference crisscrossed by the politics of consumption and production.

History

Journal

International journal of diversity in organisations, communities and nations.

Volume

4

Pagination

727 - 736

Publisher

Common Ground Publishing

Location

Altona, Vic.

ISSN

1447-9532

eISSN

1447-9583

Language

eng

Notes

Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Common Ground Publishing

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