“…The political importance of this policy agenda means that "the spaces in which education and learning take place are undergoing almost continual transformation" (Brooks, Fuller, & Waters, 2012, p. 1). Researchers in geographies of education have responded to these developments by tracing the restructuring of education from the preschool field through the compulsory years of schooling provision and into higher education (Gallagher, 2018;Harrison, Smith, & Kinton, 2016;Lizotte, 2013). In schools, this restructuring centers not only on the sociospatial organization of provision (e.g., increasing diversity in school type and questions about equality of access), but also on the curriculum (for example, increased efforts to produce competitive, self-managing emotionally-competent workers for the neoliberal age) (Gagen, 2015;Hankins & Martin, 2006;Ledwith & Reilly, 2013;Malmberg, Andersson, & Bergsten, 2014;Witten, Kearns, Lewis, Coster, & McCreanor, 2003).…”