2018
DOI: 10.31124/advance.7359473
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Edutocracy: The new West Indian plantocracy?

Abstract: <p>Despite pedagogical, technological and curricular advancements in the West Indian language education system, there has been little success in constructively addressing the pervasive regional English language examination failures. I contend that most researchers address these second language acquisition failures by focusing on symptoms rather than causes. However, this study seeks a novel way of tackling the problem, by employing the WordTree design by analogy method, typically used in the engineerin… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…My thought processes provided clarity and context for the methodology. In my attempt to develop the edutocracy model, I started with Denny’s (2020) description. The analyses of the varying documents then led to the three categorizations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…My thought processes provided clarity and context for the methodology. In my attempt to develop the edutocracy model, I started with Denny’s (2020) description. The analyses of the varying documents then led to the three categorizations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This article therefore explores a new educational theory, edutocracy (Denny, 2020). This is not the same as the power wielded by bureaucratic administrators in local school districts in America (Erskine, 2013).…”
Section: The Research Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…11 Citing the work of Laurette Bristol, Denny argues that, 'edutocracy' is 'a theory of dependency on Western ideas, knowledge, services, systems, and policies based on ideologies of intellectual hegemony, academic power, and legitimacy of imperial knowledge'. 12 the Emigrant Ambassadors' strength -their myopic pursuit of (colonial) education -simultaneously reinforced the plantocracy's caste system of Black Barbadian and West Indian elitism. this was then used by the colonial structures as a benchmark for Black 'excellence' and acceptance to assimilate into oppressive frameworks of the metropole.…”
Section: Establishing Black Women In the Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%