posted on 2023-05-18, 06:53authored byMichael Corbett
The field of rural education has not been significantly developed in Canada and the marginal status of the rural itself has contributed to this peripheral status. The emergence of geography and spatial thinking generally in social theory and in educational thought represents an opportunity to re-evaluate the importance of space and place in educational theory and policy discourse. Rather than a space formal education leaves behind, or as the location of impoverishment, isolation, and deficit, I argue that rural communities occupy an important place on the Canadian educational landscape. Given the economic, political, and cultural challenges they face, I suggest rural schools may produce higher quality educational outcomes than are generally attributed to them
History
Publication title
Canadian Journal of Education
Volume
37
Pagination
1-22
ISSN
0380-2361
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
Canadian society for the study of education
Place of publication
Canada
Rights statement
Copyright 2014 Canadian Society for the Study of Education