Index

Educational Standardisation in a Complex World

ISBN: 978-1-80071-590-5, eISBN: 978-1-80071-589-9

Publication date: 20 April 2022

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2022), "Index", Riese, H., Hilt, L.T. and Søreide, G.E. (Ed.) Educational Standardisation in a Complex World, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 233-238. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-589-920221013

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Hanne Riese, Line T. Hilt and Gunn Elisabeth Søreide. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

A Nation’s at risk (ANAR)
, 33

Accelerated digitalisation
, 35–36

Accountability
, 7–8, 64–66, 182–184

Achievement gap
, 33

Allgemeine Didaktik
, 199

Applicability
, 93

Assessment
, 164, 166–167

development of performance standards in
, 165–166

Assessment for Learning (AfL)
, 168–172

Audit culture
, 8

Bernstein’s model
, 67–68

Bildung
, 156, 199

Bologna Declaration (1999)
, 56

Bologna Process
, 34, 56

Care of the self
, 205–206

Chilean education system
, 167–168

Circuits of knowledge
, 26, 30, 35–36

Classification systems
, 218

Cognitive capitalism
, 208

Collaboration
, 55

Comparisons
, 7–8

Competence
, 93

Competence-based Education
, 66

Competitiveness
, 86

Conceptualising standards and standardisation
, 44–46

Context
, 69

Control
, 184

Cooperation on education
, 55

Critical Theory
, 185–186

Critique
, 207–208

Cultural capital
, 88

Cultural ideas
, 3–4

Danish school system
, 86–87

Datafication
, 35–36

De-centred Market identity position (D.C.M.)
, 222

De-centred Therapeutic identity position (D.C.T)
, 222

De-professionalisation
, 8–10

De-standardisation for ‘educational reality seen at large’
, 187–189

Deep learning
, 110–111

Defining standards and standardisation
, 14–15

Designs
, 224

standards
, 45

strata
, 223–224

Developmental politics
, 31–34

Digital technologies
, 35–36

Digitalisation
, 35–36

Discourses
, 224

Dissensus
, 227

Distortion
, 126

Distribution
, 224

Divisions
, 45–46

Domain-specific knowledge
, 170

Economy
, 182–184

Education. See also Social and emotional education
, 25–26, 49, 51–52, 55, 168, 182, 184, 218–219

critical studies of standards in education policy
, 26–30

governance
, 65–67

as growth
, 189–190

and present
, 190–191

regulation
, 65

Educational experience
, 186–191

Educational policy
, 5, 203

landscape of educational policy developments
, 5–10

Educational reform
, 116

Educational standardisation
, 49

Educational standards
, 6, 44, 107–108

influence of PISA on
, 183–184

Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
, 53

Embodied subjectivation
, 156

Emotional abilities
, 127–128, 203

Emotional competence
, 127

Emotional intelligence
, 198–199

European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS)
, 56

European Education
, 55–57

European Educational Space
, 134–135

European Union (EU)
, 32, 52

Every Students Succeeds Act (ESSA)
, 54

Evidence-based practices
, 185

Excellence in education
, 86

Exceptionality
, 93

Filters
, 45–46

Formal education
, 188–189

Foucauldian perspective of governmentality
, 67

Functionalist approach
, 165–166

Global agenda on governing schools and curricular knowledge
, 65–67

Global comparativism
, 34

Global Education Reform Movement (GERM)
, 13

Global society
, 34–35

Governing rationality of standards
, 4

Governmental standards
, 205–207

Governmentality
, 13, 144, 146, 198

Foucauldian perspective
, 67

neo-liberal
, 202–204

theory of
, 48–49

Health and life skills (HLS)
, 143–144, 198–199

and discourses of health promotion
, 149–151

and discourses of twenty-first-century skills
, 147–149

governing through technologies of the self
, 146

methodological reflection
, 147

risk prevention through standards of the self
, 154–155

risks and standards
, 145–146

standardising subjectivation
, 155–157

standards of the self
, 151–154

standards underpinning risks
, 157–159

Health promotion
, 149–151

High-risk narrative
, 116–117

History of standards
, 4

Human capital index (HCI)
, 35

Identity
, 106–107

resources
, 113–114

Ideological neutralism
, 136

Immanent logic of competence
, 135

Institutionalisation
, 46, 48, 50–51

Instructional discourse
, 67–68

International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA)
, 32–33

International Large-Scale Assessments (ILSAs)
, 164, 168

International organisations (IOs)
, 8

historical growth
, 8

and policy instruments
, 8

International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED)
, 32

ISCED-97
, 34

John Dewey
, 187, 189–190

Knowledge fundament
, 165

Knowledge of the self
, 205–206

Knowledge pedagogisation
, 68

Knowledge society
, 129–130

Knowledge-based regulatory tools (KBRTs)
, 66

Labour markets
, 51

Lancastrian system of teaching
, 45

Language curriculum enactments in Athens inner-city schools
, 71–77

conflicting professional standards and teachers’ space for action
, 76–77

regulative discourses and pedagogic practices in inner-city schools
, 72–76

teachers’ accounts of external constraints and local conditions
, 71–72

Laws of the market
, 225–226

Learnification framework
, 94–96

Learning
, 3

society
, 129–130

Legitimation
, 47–48, 50–51

Life skills education (LSE)
, 145, 158

Lifelong learning (LLL)
, 129–130, 219–220

Lifeworld
, 50–52

Lisbon agenda
, 11–12

Lisbon strategy
, 55

LK-20 reform
, 105, 148

Management
, 87

Market
, 86–87

Maxine Greene
, 187, 189

MAXQDA software
, 131–132

Meta capital
, 49

Monsters
, 218

Multimodal approach to discourse analysis
, 224

Narrative control
, 105, 107–108, 114, 117

Narrative plots
, 109–113

Narrow pupil identity
, 114–116

Nation-state building
, 30–31

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
, 33, 53

National Defence Education Act
, 52–53

National education policy reforms trajectory framing Greek language curriculum enactments
, 69–71

scope and methods of research
, 71

National educational systems
, 6

National tests
, 164

Neo-institutionalism
, 26, 29

Neo-liberal governmentality
, 202–204

Neoliberal rationalities, influence of
, 5–7

Neoliberalism
, 5, 154–155

Neuroscience
, 203

New managerialism
, 8–9

New professionalism
, 8–9

New Taylorism
, 9

No Child Left Behind education act (NCLB education act)
, 53–54

Non-cognitive skills
, 198

‘Normal pupil’ as standard
, 117–119

Normative indeterminacy
, 132–134

Normative specifications
, 107–108

Normativity
, 9–10

Norwegian LK-20 educational reform
, 105

narrative control
, 114–117

narrative control and educational standards
, 107–108

narrative plots and public narrative
, 109–113

‘normal pupil’ as standard
, 117–119

Norwegian educational context and core LK-20 reform documents
, 108

public narratives, policymaking and identity
, 106–107

public narratives and identity resources
, 113–114

Numbers
, 7–8

Objective reality
, 46–48

Official Recontextualising Field (ORF)
, 68, 76–77

OFSTED in United Kingdom
, 184

Olympics
, 45

Open Method of Coordination (OMC)
, 11–12, 55

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
, 29, 65–66, 91, 167, 181–183

Paidea
, 199

Parrhesia
, 209–212

Pastoral power
, 202

Pedagogic device
, 67

Pedagogic discourse
, 67–68

silence of
, 219–221

Pedagogic governance
, 65

Pedagogic practices in inner-city schools
, 72–76

Pedagogic Recontextualising Field (PRF)
, 68, 76–77

Pedagogical relationship
, 209–212

Pedagogising knowledge
, 221–222

Performance
, 87

Performance standards
, 45, 163–164

in assessment
, 165–166

consequences
, 166–168

Performativity
, 8, 10, 68–69

Policy technologies
, 87

Policymaking
, 106–107

Political scenarios
, 25–27, 30

Political sociology
, 29

Power
, 9–10

Preschool emotional competence
, 127

Production
, 224

Professional knowledge areas
, 168–172

Professional practice
, 67–69

Professional standards
, 164–165

Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA)
, 12, 34–35, 91, 181–182

efforts
, 186

influence of PISA on educational standards
, 183–184

measurements
, 201

rhetoric
, 182

test
, 6, 165

Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS)
, 32–33

Prospective identity position (P.I.)
, 222

Psy-discourses
, 198

Psycho-data
, 198

Psycho-economic governance
, 200

Psycho-economic management
, 201

Psychologisation
, 144

Public narratives
, 106–107, 109, 113–114

Pupil identity
, 105

Pupils
, 153, 203

Quick language of psychometrics
, 9

Race to the Top (RttT)
, 54

Ranks
, 45–46

Rationales of standards
, 36

Rationalised myths
, 29

Reality
, 57–58

Reciprocal typification
, 47

Regulative discourses
, 67–69

in inner-city schools
, 72–76

Retrospective identity position (R.I.)
, 222

Risks
, 4–5, 111, 145–146

prevention through standards of the self
, 154–155

School autonomy
, 65–66, 70

School context
, 67, 69

School subjects
, 88

Science and technology studies (STS)
, 11

Scientific knowledge
, 165

SEAL educational programme
, 125–126

Secondary education

global agenda on governing schools and curricular knowledge
, 65–67

language curriculum enactments in Athens inner-city schools
, 71–77

national education policy reforms trajectory framing Greek language curriculum enactments
, 69–71

regulative discourse, school context and professional practice
, 67–69

Self-affirming assessment system
, 167

Semantic construction of world society
, 136

Simplification
, 8–10

Sistema de Medición de la Calidad de la Educación (SIMCE)
, 167–168

Social, emotional and metacognitive competencies (SEMCs)
, 109, 115–117

Social and emotional competences (SEC)
, 200, 212

Social and emotional education
, 199–200, 212, 214

governmental standards
, 205–207

as neo-liberal governmentality
, 202–204

pedagogical relationship and parrhesia
, 209–212

standards-based reforms and
, 200–202

subjection vs. subjectivation
, 204–205

Social and emotional learning (SEL) programmes
, 198, 201, 207, 209

power and emotions in
, 201–202

promotion
, 201

Social and emotional skills, abilities and competences (SESACs)
, 125–126, 198

evasiveness
, 135

standardisation of
, 128–130

Social competences
, 126–127, 129–130, 133–134

in Italian case study
, 130–132

social skills, social competences, emotional abilities
, 127–128

standardisation of social and emotional abilities, skills and competences
, 128–130

standardising elusive educational aspects
, 132–136

Social order
, 47, 145

Social skills
, 127–128

Socialisation processes
, 132–134

Sociomaterial perspective
, 26

Sputnik chock
, 52–53

Sputnik effect
, 33

Standard-based reforms
, 198, 200, 202

Standard-based school reforms
, 167

Standardisation. See also Waves of standardisation
, 6, 44, 145, 181–182, 202, 218

ambiguities
, 44

conceptualising
, 44–46

dialectic of
, 184–186

of education
, 25–26, 164

in European Education
, 55–57

as part of institutionalisation
, 46–48

power of state
, 48–50

and reality
, 57–58

of social and emotional abilities, skills and competences
, 128–130

between system and lifeworld
, 50–52

theorising
, 10–14

in US Education
, 52–55

Standards
, 3–4, 9, 25, 44, 107–108, 134–135, 145–146, 164

conceptualising
, 44–46

history of
, 4

and landscape of educational policy developments
, 5–10

standard-based education
, 5–6

theorising
, 10–14

underpinning risks
, 157–159

Standards of the self
, 146–147, 151, 154

State power in education
, 48–49

Stop-go dynamics
, 70

Subject positions
, 113–114

Subjection
, 204–205

Subjectivation
, 155, 157, 204–205

Subjective reality
, 46–47

Symbolic capital, concentration and monopolisation of
, 49

Talent Academy
, 87–88, 92

Teachers

accounts of external constraints and local conditions
, 71–72

conceptions of social competences
, 126

work
, 9

Teaching
, 3

Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS)
, 68

Technicisation of teaching
, 10

Technologies of power
, 144–145

Technologies of the self
, 144–146

Test-based accountability
, 54–55

Tests of legitimacy
, 26, 29

Theorising standards

in educational research
, 11–14

and standardisation
, 10–14

Theory of governmentality
, 48–49

Totally pedagogising society (TPS)
, 18, 218

design activism and redesigning standards
, 223–226

pedagogising knowledge
, 221–222

redesigning
, 222–227

redesigning pedagogic work
, 226

silence of pedagogic discourse
, 219–221

social/society
, 227

Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS)
, 32–33

Twenty-first-century skills
, 147–149

Two-cycle system
, 56

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
, 31–32

statistics
, 34

Upper Secondary Danish School Context
, 88–90

approaches
, 87–88

learnification framework
, 94–96

marketing talent
, 92–93

performing talent
, 96–99

setting standards for talent development in
, 90–92

US Education
, 52–55

Wash-back effect
, 166

Waves of standardisation
, 29

accelerated digitalisation
, 35–36

critical studies of standards in education policy
, 26–30

developmental politics
, 31–34

global society
, 34–35

nation-state building
, 30–31

Whole child approaches
, 203

World Bank
, 32

Yale RULER approach
, 125–126