Abstract:
This dissertation is based on the assumption that the implementation of the
Brazilian high school reform instituted by Law No. 13.415/2017, known as the
New High School (NEM), produces and reproduces educational inequalities
among young people from the popular classes, most of whom attend public
schools. The research problem consists in understanding how neoliberal
foundations and their unfolding in curricular, methodological, and organizational
formats affect educational inequalities and, consequently, social inequalities. The
general objective was to analyze the neoliberal premises present in the legislation
that regulates the NEM, its curricular framework, methodological arrangements,
and organizational formats, as well as how this curricular conception impacts
educational and social inequalities. The specific objectives were: a) to understand
the relationship between schooling and the production of inequalities, based on
different theoretical perspectives; b) to contextualize High School in Brazilian
educational policy, highlighting the reform promoted by Law No. 13.415/2017
within the framework of neoliberalism; and c) to examine how the structuring
elements of the New High School express neoliberal rationality and contribute,
through their implementation, to the deepening of educational and social
inequalities. This qualitative and bibliographic-documentary research is grounded
in critical theoretical frameworks such as Bourdieu (1992), Dubet (2004), Libâneo
(2012; 2018), Frigotto e Ciavatta (2003), Frigotto et al (2005), Miranda (2021),
Saviani (2007; 2008; 2013), Melo (2018), Cury (2002; 2005; 2008), Romanelli
(1986), Dardot e Laval (2016), Ball (2014), among others, articulating the analysis
of theoretical works, educational legislation, and official documents, especially
the Law of Guidelines and Bases (LDB), the National Common Curricular Base
(BNCC), and the National Curriculum Guidelines for Upper Secondary Education
(DCN-EM). The research examines the structuring elements of the reform, such
as the increase in workload, the formative itineraries, the emptying of the general
education component, the reduction of subjects such as Sociology, Philosophy,
Arts, and Physical Education, curricular flexibilization, and the emphasis on
competency-based training. The findings indicate that such changes express a
logic of subordination of education to market demands and preparation for work,
to the detriment of integral, critical, and civic education. The results suggest that
the NEM, rather than democratizing access to knowledge, functions as a vector
for deepening inequalities, subordinating school education to the market and the
logic of employability. It is concluded that, for the majority of young people from
the popular classes who attend public schools, the promise of an integral and
emancipatory education has been replaced by a restricted, fragmented, and
instrumental formation, which reinforces the need for redistributive policies
capable of ensuring social justice and the full development of human potential.