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Introduction: Heresies and orthodoxies in contemporary schooling: Helen Proctor, Peter Free body and Patrick Brownlee
Schools not fit for purpose: New approaches for the times: Johanna Wyn
Schools and communities fit for purpose: Dorothy Bottrell
Testing times: Data and their (mis-)use in schools: Peter Reimann
Are these testing times or is it a time to test? Reconsidering the place of tests in students? academic development: Andrew J. Martin
Evidence-Based Policy: Epistemologically specious, ideologically unsound: Anthony Welch
Neglecting the evidence: Are we expecting too much from quality teaching? Margaret Vickers
Public diversity; private disadvantage: schooling and ethnicity: Carol Reid
Building new social movements: The politics of responsibility and accountability in school-community relationships: Kelly Free body
Does the new doxa of integrationism make multicultural education a contemporary heresy? Georgina Tsolidis
Multicultural education: Contemporary heresy or simply another doxa: Megan Watkins
Why global policies fail disengaged young people at the local level: Susan Groundwater-Smith & Nicole Mockler
Education policy ?at risk?: Kitty te Riele
?Money made us?: A short history of government funds for Australian schools Geoffrey Sherington and John P. Hughes
Beyond modernity? A sociological engagement with ?A short history of government funding for Australian schools?: Martin Forsey
Markets all around: defending education in a neoliberal time: Raewyn Connell.-Markets made out of love: parents, schools and communities before neoliberalism: Helen Proctor
Who are the heretics? Patrick Brownlee and Peter Free body.

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