This groundbreaking and thought-provoking book puts the care experience at the centre of education history. It provides historical insight to the growing field of care studies and reveals how nineteenth century assumptions and prejudices about care-experienced pupils helped shape education policy and continue to do so today.
This groundbreaking and thought-provoking book puts the care experience at the centre of education history. It provides historical insight to the growing field of care studies and reveals how nineteenth century assumptions and prejudices about care-experienced pupils helped shape education policy and continue to do so today.