Reproduction, Resistance and Transformation at Maranatha High School

avondale-bepress.abstract<p>The focus of this thesis is the attempt by the Seventh-day Adventist Church to reproduce SDA culture in students attending one of its schools, Maranatha High School. As a 'critical ethnography', it adopts a theoretical perspective from critical social theory to examine problems associated with this attempt. These problems are reflected in data gathered by a range of ethnographic techniques. The study first portrays the socio-political dynamics underlying the historical creation of Adventist culture generally, its embodiment in institutional forms, and the development of a substantial educational structure intended to transmit that culture to succeeding generations.<br /><br />The study then focuses on current SDA educational philosophy, and the assumptions underlying the principles of selection, organisation, transmission and evaluation of knowledge considered to be valid. It then examines how Maranatha High School itself seeks to implement those principles. In this context, the study also reflects on the political implications of the modes of management and institutional control adopted at various levels of the organisation and in the school.<br /><br />As a dialectical study, the thesis views the school as a social setting in which knowledgeable humans engage in communicative interaction. Rather than promoting smooth reproduction, the school is portrayed as a site of struggle, negotiation and potential transformation as participants resist forces that they perceive to be constraining and oppressing them. Consequently the thesis examines the perceptions of the various groups of participants, and the nature and impact of their interaction. In as much as teachers are official 'managers' of SDA culture and knowledge, this examination focuses especially on their personal definitions of the situation, the dilemmas that confront them from internal and external sources, the development of their own cultural forms in response, and the implications this action has for cultural reproduction and continuity.</p>
avondale-bepress.articleid1014
avondale-bepress.authorsDon C Roy
avondale-bepress.context-key4176106
avondale-bepress.coverpage-urlhttps://research.avondale.edu.au/theses_non_Avondale/15
avondale-bepress.document-typethesis
avondale-bepress.field.avon_awardinginstDeakin University
avondale-bepress.field.comments<p>Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Thesis. Deakin University.</p><p>Staff and students of Avondale College may access a print copy of this thesis from Avondale College Library (306.668433 R81)</p>
avondale-bepress.field.custom_citation<p>Roy, D. C.(1988).<em> Reproduction, resistance and transformation at Maranatha high school.</em> (Doctoral thesis). Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.</p>
avondale-bepress.field.degree_nameDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
avondale-bepress.field.embargo_date1988-01-01T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.field.publication_date1988-01-01T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.field.source_fulltext_urlhttp://dro.deakin.edu.au/view/DU:30028020
avondale-bepress.keywordsethnography
avondale-bepress.keywordsculture
avondale-bepress.keywordsSeventh-day Adventist
avondale-bepress.keywordseducation philosophy
avondale-bepress.label15
avondale-bepress.publication-date1988-01-01T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.publication-titleTheses Non-Avondale
avondale-bepress.statepublished
avondale-bepress.submission-date2013-05-27T21:22:31Z
avondale-bepress.submission-paththeses_non_Avondale/15
avondale-bepress.titleReproduction, Resistance and Transformation at Maranatha High School
avondale-bepress.typearticle
dc.contributor.authorRoy, Don C.
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-01T00:37:07Z
dc.date.available2023-11-01T00:37:07Z
dc.date.issued1988-01-01
dc.date.submitted2013-05-27T21:22:31Z
dc.description.abstract<p>The focus of this thesis is the attempt by the Seventh-day Adventist Church to reproduce SDA culture in students attending one of its schools, Maranatha High School. As a 'critical ethnography', it adopts a theoretical perspective from critical social theory to examine problems associated with this attempt. These problems are reflected in data gathered by a range of ethnographic techniques. The study first portrays the socio-political dynamics underlying the historical creation of Adventist culture generally, its embodiment in institutional forms, and the development of a substantial educational structure intended to transmit that culture to succeeding generations.<br /><br />The study then focuses on current SDA educational philosophy, and the assumptions underlying the principles of selection, organisation, transmission and evaluation of knowledge considered to be valid. It then examines how Maranatha High School itself seeks to implement those principles. In this context, the study also reflects on the political implications of the modes of management and institutional control adopted at various levels of the organisation and in the school.<br /><br />As a dialectical study, the thesis views the school as a social setting in which knowledgeable humans engage in communicative interaction. Rather than promoting smooth reproduction, the school is portrayed as a site of struggle, negotiation and potential transformation as participants resist forces that they perceive to be constraining and oppressing them. Consequently the thesis examines the perceptions of the various groups of participants, and the nature and impact of their interaction. In as much as teachers are official 'managers' of SDA culture and knowledge, this examination focuses especially on their personal definitions of the situation, the dilemmas that confront them from internal and external sources, the development of their own cultural forms in response, and the implications this action has for cultural reproduction and continuity.</p>
dc.identifier.citation<p>Roy, D. C.(1988).<em> Reproduction, resistance and transformation at Maranatha high school.</em> (Doctoral thesis). Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.</p>
dc.identifier.urihttps://research.avondale.edu.au/handle/123456789/04176106
dc.language.isoen_us
dc.rights<p>Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Thesis. Deakin University.</p><p>Staff and students of Avondale College may access a print copy of this thesis from Avondale College Library (306.668433 R81)</p>
dc.subjectethnography
dc.subjectculture
dc.subjectSeventh-day Adventist
dc.subjecteducation philosophy
dc.titleReproduction, Resistance and Transformation at Maranatha High School
dc.typeThesis
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