Abstract
This article is concerned not so much with school improvement issues per se as with the messages about school improvement provided by academic texts. School improvement texts are important because they can be expected to reflect the current state of play of intellectual thinking about school improvement and because they also clearly have some impact on policy and practice, that is, to some extent they frame up school improvement issues for practitioners and policymakers. Yet academics holding socially critical perspectives have sometimes been dismissive of school improvement and other education management texts because of their perception of a 'problem-solving' tendency which is socially and politically decon textualised. Thus when Jenny Ozga provided a review of education management texts in the British Journal of Sociology of Education in 1992 she didn't actually review any books because she didn't think they were worth it (Ozga, 1992).