6533b82ffe1ef96bd12946bd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Finnish Quality Evaluation Discourse : Swimming Against the Global Tide?
Hannele Pitkänensubject
ethnic diversity and educationpolicy developments and educationpolicy sociology and educationkoulutusjärjestelmätkaupunkitutkimuskoulutustavoitteetkoulutuspalvelutFinnish educationurban studies and educationFoucault and educationsosiaalinen oikeudenmukaisuuskoulutuspolitiikkakoulutussosiologiatasa-arvogender inequalities and educationkoulutuspolitical structures and educationkoulutussuunnittelusocial class and educationFinnish education systemtasa-arvokasvatusFinnish policies and educationsocial justice and educationFinnish schoolingBourdieu and educationdescription
AbstractThis chapter discusses Finnish quality evaluation in comprehensive education, recognising that it frequently differs from that used by the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM) in most countries. Instead of high-stakes testing of pupil achievement, monitoring or school inspection, Finnish quality evaluation (QE) rests mainly on sample-based national testing and self-evaluations conducted in schools and municipalities. The argument presented here is that, although reform of the Finnish education system has often taken a different path from other countries, at the level of discourse, the Finnish system is increasingly caught between the more usual approach to QE and the Finnish variant approach. This follows an analysis of the emergence and formation of the present quality evaluation discourse, consisting of historical layers of discursive practices of school-based development, performance and market-oriented quality. Between the rationalities of these discursive practices but also in relation to recent political concerns about the QE system, it remains to be seen to what extent the Finnish system is able to resist the power of the discourse into which global ideas and rationalities of quality evaluation have been imprinted.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023-01-01 |