tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31157556802280882612024-02-08T08:24:30.550-08:00Finland and PISAAn online synopsis of a recently completed doctoral thesis about the reasons for Finland's success in PISAJennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.comBlogger90125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-33583694721990469272011-07-15T08:26:00.000-07:002011-07-15T08:56:43.131-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Vocational EducationLauri Kurvonen gave a presentation on Finland's vocational education sector.<br /><br />The notes of the presentation are as follows:<br /><ul><li>7-8% of students in vocational education take the matriculation examination</li><li>initial vocational education, but also specialist vocational qualifications, mainly for adults</li><li>last year of comprehensive school -- general application to "second step" -- student expresses their interests if they want to go to vocational education</li><li>the<span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;"> </span>yhteishaku </span>is based on marks from school, a nationwide application</li><li>it is now internet-based</li><li>make three preferences, either vocational education and training (VET) or <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium </span></li><li>polytechnic -- higher education in the vocational sector</li><li>1990s -- changed VET to 3 years</li><li>VET -- 10% take classes in the <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium </span>and 8% take the matriculation exam</li><li>5% of students in university have a VET background</li><li>25% of students in polytechnics have an academic background</li><li>VET -- 2 ways to do initial VET, from school or passing skills tests, aimed at adults with working experience</li><li>also further qualifications, similar to the NVQ in the UK</li><li>approximately 60,000 students leave comprehensive school per year -- 45% to VET, 50% to <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium, </span>4-5% do not go directly to upper-secondary school, 1-2% take an additional year in comprehensive school</li></ul>General objectives of VET<br /><ul><li>knowledge and skills necessary for vocational competence and employment</li><li>knowledge skills needed in further studies and lifelong learning</li><li>1/3 general subjects in VET</li></ul>Finland<br /><ul><li>fast industrialization post-World War II</li><li>needed a way to produce skilled labor</li><li>Finnish government supported training</li><li>VET only way to education many in skills</li></ul>Vocational Education and Training<br /><ul><li>operated by municipalities</li><li>approximately 200 VET schools</li><li>almost all of the schools are public</li><li>combination of theory and practice</li><li>same teachers teach both areas</li><li>1945 Act -- government provides 1/2 of money to vocational industries</li><li>1/2 of money comes from local and 1/2 from national budgets</li><li>have to buy books but allowance from state</li></ul>1990s<br /><ul><li>decentralization and deregulation -- decisions on a local level</li><li>no more inspections, self-evaluations</li><li>merging of small schools</li></ul>Qualification comes from the specific national core curriculum<br /><br />Students can have a personal study plan<br /><br />7 sectors of VET, 53 total qualifications:<br /><ol><li>natural resources</li><li>technology and transport</li><li>business and administration</li><li>tourism, catering, and home economics</li><li>health and social services</li><li>culture</li><li>leisure and physical education</li></ol>Initial VET<br /><ul><li>120 credits (study weeks)</li><li>40 per year</li><li>20 credits for on-the-job training</li><li>(apprenticeships -- mainly adults)</li></ul>120 credits<br /><ul><li>20 credits -- core subjects e.g. math</li><li>90 credits -- vocational studies</li><li>10 credits -- free to choose</li></ul>On-the-job learning<br /><ul><li>introduced in 1999-2000</li><li>done in the workplace</li><li>teacher comes to the workplace once in a while</li><li>students, not employees</li><li>there to learn, not to make money</li><li>in many cases, the student is hired</li></ul>Skills demonstrations<br /><ul><li>practical tests in all vocational modules</li><li>introduced in 2006</li><li>in addition to written tests</li></ul>Main challenges<br /><ul><li>lack of labor in certain fields</li><li>cooperation of on-the-job learning and working life, with general studies</li><li>opening paths to further studies</li><li>supporting weak students, preventing drop-outs</li><li>improving the prestige of VET</li></ul>Competence-based qualifications<br /><ul><li>specialist and further qualifications</li><li>adult education -- 1000 institutions, 14% of Ministry of Education budget, 1 million adults participate</li><li>developed in 1990s</li><li>apprenticeships</li><li>updating of qualifications</li></ul>Levels of qualifications<br /><ul><li>initial</li><li>further</li><li>specialist</li></ul>Large increase in participants in VET<br /><br />Polytechnics<br /><ul><li>from the mid-1990s</li><li>more clear situation for this sector of higher education</li><li>for more practical focus, e.g. doctors at university, nurses at polytechnic</li><li>two types of engineers: <span style="font-style: italic;">insenoori </span>(polytechnic), and <span style="font-style: italic;">diplomi-insenoori </span>(university)<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-57242619202785853482011-07-15T07:49:00.000-07:002011-07-15T08:25:00.985-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Educational System: Discussion Session<style>@font-face { font-family: "Times New Roman"; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: Times; }table.MsoNormalTable { font-size: 10pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"; }div.Section1 { page: Section1; }</style><span style=";font-family:Times;font-size:12pt;" lang="SV">Riitta Lampola, Irmeli Halinen, Pirjo Koivula, Auli Toom, and Ossi Airaskorpi headed a discussion session during the </span>Special Features of the Finnish Educational System conference.<br /><br />Here are the notes from the session:<br /><ul><li>PISA -- proud of it but surprised by the results -- "What's so good about us?" -- not used to being in the limelight</li><li>primary school -- can happen that the teachers "follow" the students for six years, but more common that teachers "loop" grades 1 and 2</li><li>the principal at a school in Espoo (Airaskorpi) says he prefers to change teachers -- the variety in style is good for everyone</li><li>teacher's salary straight from university is approximately €2500 a month</li><li>salary quite low compared to other careers with Master's degrees</li><li>early childhood education's purpose is to promote learning, intentionally promoted in the early years</li><li>recently, early childhood education is under the education system</li><li>neurological/developmental research from the University of Jyvaskyla says it is the best developmentally (in terms of age) for learning in the Finnish system. Children learn to read and write faster at that age</li><li>the matriculation exam -- is it narrowing students' learning?<br /></li><li>the national curriculum is broad</li><li>the university entrance exam is difficult</li><li>university entrance -- points for leaving certification</li><li>difficulty in university entrance: need a matriculation exam, a good report from the <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium,</span> entrance test</li><li>can attend university from vocational upper-secondary education</li><li>higher prestige in vocational education</li><li>long-term evaluation -- samples of grade levels and subjects, national evaluation council conducts "theme" evaluations and make conclusions</li><li>correlation with family background and performance in school; home has a strong effect, but in Finland, it is the smallest among the OECD countries</li><li>not much talk about leadership and educational management</li><li>investment in the personality of the teachers</li><li>trust in the teachers -- independence</li><li>autonomy a tradition in Finland</li><li>principals -- municipality school board chooses them but it varies</li><li>principals must have a teaching qualification, examination in school administration, e.g. Helsinki has a training period for principals</li><li>try to keep hierarchy low, keep egalitarian values -- good for discussion and planning of work</li><li>school inspection dropped -- self-evaluation in faculty lounge</li><li>trust, high level of teacher education makes this possible</li><li>self-evaluation of schools -- 3 year cycle. Implements parental survey, personnel survey, student survey, meetings with teachers over different topics</li><li>ethos of self-evaluation from teacher education, much self evaluation in teacher education, so in schools as well</li><li>e.g. self-evaluation in Helsinki: learning results compared to national sample, parental opinions, health reviews, curriculum processes to evaluate (does it work in practice?), annual plan for the school year -- was it achieved?</li><li>trust -- acceptable for teachers to make errors. Not criticism but support</li><li>Finnish teaching -- old-fashioned. Visitors expect it to be more student-centered. Teacher supported and often led</li><li>professional development/in-service education -- based on municipalities and their research</li><li>universities also do further training</li><li>teachers have obligatory participation 3 days a year (minimum)</li><li>350 school dropouts in the whole country in one year (but too much in the opinion of Finns!)</li><li>high achievers use a "learning plan" -- differentiation important for heterogeneous groups</li><li>"learning plan" -- students ca challenge themselves as they like</li><li>still developing how they can support the students more</li><li>big cities have resources to have specialized schools -- students can apply to the school</li><li>possible but rare to skip a grade</li><li>possible to start school at age 6</li><li>teacher salary covers 24 lessons plus three hours prep, etc.</li><li>before/after school care largely available in municipalities, such as school club activities after school</li><li>review of the national core curriculum approximately every ten years</li><li>budgeting of education -- no bureaucracy -- no money to inspection or testing</li><li>lower teacher salaries, average spending than the OECD average</li><li>2004 -- the "strengthening" of the national core curriculum</li><li>1998 -- new areas /regulations on student welfare, discipline in schools, more detailed guidelines in how to organize these areas</li><li>1994 -- curriculum very thin, approximately 2 pages of goals and content</li><li>2004 -- more detailed goals and content, new final assessment criteria and examples of good work</li><li>allow teachers more support and assessment guidelines</li><li>Finland -- capable of broad, infrastructural change</li><li>implementation of rational values</li><li>Americans -- Finnish system "looser" but a cultural bias</li><li>Finland -- school should be fun</li><li>recess outdoors every 45 minutes</li><li>varied start to the school day, but nobody thinks it is a waste of valuable school time if they start late</li><li>light homework load -- efficiency</li><li>flexibility of system</li><li>Swedish immersion stream -- Finnish speakers immersed into the Swedish language</li><li>not necessarily an emphasis on fun, but a friendly relationship between teachers and students</li><li>children usually take 5 months to learn<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-43343856782041238062011-07-14T09:44:00.000-07:002011-07-14T10:08:05.685-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Teacher as Future-Maker: Research-Based Teacher Education in FinlandAuli Toom of the University of Helsinki gave a presentation entitled, Teacher as Future-Maker: Research-Based Teacher Education in Finland.<br /><br />Here are the notes from the presentation:<br /><br />Orientation<br /><ul><li>wide international interest in Finnish teacher education</li><li>PISA</li><li>specific characteristics of Finnish teacher education</li><li>huge number of applicants</li><li>MA for teachers</li><li>practice for teacher education in special teacher education schools that are part of universities</li><li>popular -- best applicants chosen</li></ul>Teachers' responsibilities and current challenges<br /><ul><li>high goals of national core curriculum</li><li>increasing size of classes</li><li>pupils with special educational needs</li><li>multicultural issues -- more immigrants</li></ul>What is the core of teachers' work?<br /><ul><li>teach</li><li>educate</li><li>take care</li><li>all of the above?</li><li>correspondence between competence and qualification</li></ul>Different teacher education philosophy in Finland<br /><ul><li>e.g. deductive/intuitive approaches, school-based as in the PGCE in England</li><li>e.g. intuitive/inductive approaches, experiential and personal</li><li>e.g. rational/inductive approaches, problem-based, case approach</li><li>e.g. deductive/rational approaches, research-based, as in Finland with the theoretical view of pedagogical thinking, justified in the classroom</li></ul>Two levels of research-based teacher education<br /><ul><li>e.g. general level/teaching practice --> pedagogical thinking</li><li>e.g. basic level/teaching practice --> everyday thinking</li><li>(these approaches help the teacher trainee make pedagogical decisions)</li><li>e.g. general level/research practice --> producing research expertise</li><li>e.g. basic level/research practice --> adaptation and consuming of research</li><li>(these approaches help the teacher trainee think critically about their own work)</li></ul>Research-based approach to teacher education<br /><ul><li>every unit connected to research</li><li>conceptualization of practice</li><li>research methods courses, both quantitative and qualitative approaches</li><li>overall competence of research methods</li><li>Master's degree thesis</li><li>teachers utilize practitioner research</li><li>producer of research -- ability to conduct own research</li><li>consumers of research -- ability to understand and use research results and inform their own work</li><li>direct access to doctoral programs</li><li>completion of a teaching degree allows admission to PhD programs</li><li>many undertake a doctorate simultaneous to teaching</li></ul>Principles of teaching practice<br /><ul><li>2 practice periods</li></ul><ol><li>focus on pedagogical practice (5 weeks, either 3rd and 4th year, or 2nd and 4th year)</li><li>overall teaching practice (5 weeks)</li></ol><ul><li>most teacher education instructors have PhDs</li><li>"field" or "lab" schools cooperate with the teacher education courses</li><li>teacher education schools are part of the university</li></ul>Supervision of teaching practice<br /><ul><li>interaction with mentors</li><li>tips and rational explanation</li><li>reflection in portfolio</li></ul>Assessment of teaching practice<br /><ul><li>no grades -- pass/fail</li><li>teacher education schools supervised by those with PhDs</li><li>"field" or "lab" school supervisors trained to do teacher education and are compensated with money or academic credit (for a supervisor portfolio)</li></ul>Teacher educators understanding of the research-based approach<br /><ul><li>4 dimensions:</li></ul><ol><li>context -- academic teacher education</li><li>approach -- organizing theme of teacher education</li><li>content -- curriculum of teacher education</li><li>aim -- teachers' pedagogical thinking</li></ol><ul><li>relevance of the approach</li></ul><ol><li>relevant to teachers' work</li><li>teachers actively involved in curriculum development and action</li><li>profession -- multi-professional collaboration</li><li>no longer a static workplace</li></ol>Core competencies of a future teacher<br /><ul><li>self-confidence</li><li>interaction skills</li><li>pedagogical skills</li><li>tolerate uncertainty</li><li>metacognitive skills</li></ul>Admissions process (University of Helsinki)<br /><ul><li>book test</li><li>interview</li><li>group interaction/teaching exercise (e.g. 6 applicants, 15 minute mini lesson for others)</li></ul>Main idea of classroom teacher education<br /><ul><li>interaction</li><li>expertise</li><li>society</li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-65474202411962617512011-07-13T08:47:00.001-07:002011-07-13T09:14:18.708-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Special Needs Education and Student Welfare - Basis for Quality and EquityPirjo Koivula, a counselor for education, gave a presentation called Special Needs Education and Student Welfare Services: Basis for Quality and Equity.<br /><br />Here are the notes from the presentation:<br /><br />Strong individual support<br /><ul><li>all students have the same objectives and possibilities</li></ul>Special support<br /><ul><li>difficulties, disorders and disadvantages</li><li>every student has the right to support</li><li>support depends on quality and extent of difficulties</li><li>identification as early as possible </li></ul>Special Educational Needs (SEN) and pupil welfare in the Basic Education Act and the National Core Curriculum<br /><br />Legislation<br /><ul><li>SEN -- inclusiveness</li><li>inclusion in mainstream classrooms</li><li>equal opportunities</li><li>first alternative -- include in mainstream</li><li>second alternative -- SEN students in a special group, class, or school</li></ul>Definition of SEN<br /><ul><li>from the Basic Education Act</li><li>affected by illness, disability, reduced functional ability </li><li>require mental and social support</li><li>risk factors in development that affect learning</li></ul>Right to special support<br /><ul><li>rights to receive (for free)</li><li>education</li><li>interpretation</li><li>assistant e.g. math assistant during lesson</li><li>special aids</li><li>provided at all levels of education</li></ul>Definition of student welfare services from the Basic Education Act<br /><ul><li>good learning</li><li>good mental, physical and social health</li><li>good school environment e.g. lunch, transportation</li></ul>Well-being<br /><ul><li>basic needs are most important</li></ul>Safety<br /><ul><li>against violence, bullying, and harassment</li></ul>Right to student welfare<br /><ul><li>in basic education -- free welfare for participation, free school meal</li><li>in upper-secondary education -- meal, guidance</li></ul>National core curriculum: student welfare<br /><ul><li>individual support</li><li>strong community</li><li>transport and school meals</li><li>prevention and taking care of problems e.g. absences, bullying, mental health, substance abuse</li></ul>Teaching pupils with SEN<br /><ul><li>starting point -- pupil's strengths and personal needs</li><li>education required to promote initiative and self-confidence</li><li>right time and place for studying</li><li>decisions made on different activities</li><li>sufficient resources</li></ul>Flowchart<br /><br />remedial teaching --> part-time SEN --> full-time SEN --> individual plan of education --> adjusted syllabi --> individual assessment<br /><br />Remedial teaching - when?<br /><ul><li>temporary e.g. prolonged absence</li><li>before student judged as weak</li><li>immediately after appearance of difficulty</li><li>often and widely as necessary</li><li>initiated by teacher</li><li>organized in cooperation with parents</li><li>during or out of lessons</li></ul>Part-time SEN<br /><ul><li>provided when slight difficulties in learning, or need more support for overcoming learning difficulties </li><li>administered (more commonly as) team teaching, small groups, individually, most often in reading and writing difficulties for young children, for older students, in foreign languages and math</li></ul>Individual Education Plan (IEP)<br /><ul><li>in the National Core Curriculum</li><li>decision of SEN is made with changes to the syllabus or teaching arrangements</li></ul>Multi-professional approach<br /><ul><li>cross-sectoral cooperation</li></ul>Pre-school education for six-year-olds<br /><ul><li>96% of six-year-olds attend</li><li>core curriculum in 2000, reforms in 2003</li></ul>Core curriculum reforms 2004<br /><ul><li>before and after school core curriculum<br /></li><li>grades 1 and 2 curricula, SEN</li></ul>Amount of students in SEN<br /><ul><li>2006 - 7.7% of students</li><li>1998 - 3.8%</li><li>better diagnosed now?</li><li>do too many students have SEN?</li><li>dependent on municipalities -- looking toward more equality in different municipalities</li><li>more boys in SEN -- 68% boys, 32% girls</li><li>more and more students in SEN due to dyslexia (better diagnosed)</li><li>21.9% in part-time SEN</li><li>girls in SEN - math, boys in behavioral SEN</li><li>individualization of syllabus in a single subject more common</li></ul>Ministry of Education 2006 - long-term project on SEN<br /><ul><li>earlier support and prevention</li><li>intensified support before a decision to differentiate student e.g. remedial, counseling</li><li>helps bolster learning and prevent problems with learning</li><li>move towards more inclusive education</li><li>education administered where it is most beneficial for the student e.g. deaf pupil may need to move out of municipality</li></ul>Future challenges<br /><ul><li>equality in education and student welfare</li><li>municipal autonomy</li><li>regional differences</li><li>support to mainstream schools<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-28218538169020526092011-07-13T08:13:00.001-07:002011-07-13T08:44:18.413-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Curriculum Development in FinlandIrmeli Halinen, Head of preschool and basic education development at the Finnish National Board of Education, gave a speech entitled curriculum development in Finland.<br /><br />Here are the notes:<br /><br />Basic principles of education<br /><ul><li>equity<br /></li><li>equality</li><li>high quality</li><li>inclusiveness</li><li>try to take care of all students and their needs</li></ul>Finnish education system<br /><ul><li>6 year olds</li><li>optional 10th year for those who need more support</li><li>can do vocational upper-secondary education and the matriculation qualifications<br /></li><li>allows for individual choices/paths</li></ul>Learning culture intertwines:<br /><ol><li>the education system -- comprehensive, inclusive, coherent, trust and support</li><li>teachers -- good, valued, high quality of teacher education</li><li>individual support -- early intervention plays an active role</li></ol>History of the education system<br /><ul><li>comprehensive reform from 1970-1977</li><li>upper secondary school started 1975</li><li>renewed the national core curriculum in 1985, 1994, 2003-2004</li></ul>Reforms<br /><ul><li>coherent and consistent (even with different governments)</li><li>first national curriculum 1970 -- centralized system (ability grouping grades 7-9, lowest groups did not go to university/upper-secondary school), detailed goals, content, guidelines<br /></li><li>core curriculum 1985 -- made the municipality more important, ability grouping abolished, eligibility to further studies for everyone</li><li>revolution/paradigm shift 1994 -- no more school inspection, inspection of teaching materials, delegation of power to municipalities and schools, cooperative learning, "thin" core curriculum</li><li>2004 -- method of cooperation, feedback from schools, moved "backwards" - strengthened support and guidance, municipalities getting too large, more core curriculum, new lessons hours, emphasis on goals rather than content</li></ul>Culture of coherence, trust, and support<br /><ul><li>commonly accepted values, goals, expectations</li><li>support and cooperation instead of control</li><li>trust in municipality</li><li>interaction at/with all levels e.g. municipal, school, state</li><li>teacher status</li></ul>Reading comprehension<br /><ul><li>1965 and 2005 -- lowest performing students doing much better in 2005 than in 1965</li><li>Finland higher than the OECD average, especially at the lowest performing level<br /></li></ul>Quality of Finnish education<br /><ul><li>good outcomes -- PISA, low class repetition (2%), low drop out rate during compulsory school (0.5%), 96% to upper-secondary education</li><li>high trust in education</li><li>equality of provision/quality </li><li>effective use of resources e.g. 190 days, 4-7 hours per day, moderate homework, 6% of GDP to education</li></ul>Math scores<br /><ul><li>student and score level -- Finland higher than OECD average, especially at the low level</li></ul>Time in mathematics<br /><ul><li>moderate amount of time/homework</li><li>huge difference e.g. Korea and Finland, especially time out of/after school</li></ul>Curriculum strategy<br /><ul><li>curriculum - national</li><li>municipal curricula</li><li>school curricula</li><li>curriculum is an ongoing process</li><li>principals and teachers in curriculum development</li><li>parents and students too</li><li>national agreement of participation of other sectors, e.g. health and social care</li></ul>Steering system<br /><ul><li>paradigm change -- teaching and learning on top, most important; national curriculum a good base of support</li></ul>Coherence<br /><ul><li>interaction and common direction</li><li>e.g. national, municipal, school level</li><li>e.g. teacher education, curriculum, study materials </li></ul>Curriculum<br /><ul><li>inclusive and supportive</li><li>broad</li><li>inclusive for all students</li><li>balance between academic achievement and student welfare</li><li>more attention/emphasis on holistic development of the child</li><li>PISA showed that the academics are good, but a need for more holistic education</li><li>school culture and environment is open, flexible, accepting</li><li>future-oriented, competence-based thinking </li><li>curriculum a tool for leadership and professional and school development</li></ul>Roles and tasks of the school curriculum<br /><ul><li>school curriculum involves:</li></ul><ol><li>school's plan</li><li>teachers' plan</li><li>individual study plan</li><li>municipal strategies</li><li>parents</li><li>other schools</li><li>individual study</li><li>special education</li></ol>Basic Education Act<br /><ul><li>"Education shall be provided according to the student's age and capabilities and so as to promote all students' healthy growth and development"</li><li>starting point</li><li>take differences into account</li><li>minimum and maximum hours in school</li><li>organization of teaching and learning: Basic Education Act and Decree, Government's Decree, National Core Curriculum, municipal/school curriculum</li><li>distribution of hours</li><li>integrative, cross-curricular themes in lower secondary education, e.g. growth as a person, citizenship</li><li>organizing teaching and learning</li><li>flexibility and school/teacher autonomy</li><li>importance of goals</li><li>goals expressed as competencies (large competencies, not detailed)</li><li>teachers encouraged o take into account students' needs</li><li>emphasis/importance of good basic competencies</li></ul>Concept of learning (<span style="font-weight: bold;">the PISA secret?</span>)<br /><ul><li>is it old-fashioned in Finland?<br /></li><li>teachers see students as responsible for their own learning</li><li>learning process is individual <span style="font-weight: bold;">and</span> cooperative </li></ul>Teachers are the key<br /><ul><li>McKinsey -- need the right people, development, and best instruction to be good teachers</li><li>"the only way to improve outcomes is to improve instruction"</li></ul>Quality of instruction<br /><ul><li>respecting pupils</li><li>high expectations</li><li>individual learning</li><li>friendly atmosphere</li><li>combination of individual, group, community -- a process</li><li>support of teachers</li><li>flexible teaching</li><li>pedagogical leadership</li></ul>Assessment<br /><ul><li>parent-teacher conferences<br /></li><li>e.g. goals for the child<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-45149237173377180192011-07-13T06:02:00.000-07:002011-07-13T08:12:45.601-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Reasons Behind Finnish Students' Success in PISA (Scientific Literacy)Jari Lavonen, Professor of Physics and Chemistry Education at the University of Helsinki, gave a presentation about the reasons behind Finnish students' success in PISA (scientific literacy).<br /><br />The notes from his presentation are as follows:<br /><br />PISA framework 2006 had a science emphasis, measuring knowledge about science and the knowledge about the use of science. For example:<br /><ul><li>identification of scientific issues</li><li>explanation of phenomena</li><li>drawing of evidence-based conclusions</li></ul>Questions:<br /><ul><li>open or closed answer</li><li>different competencies</li><li>knowledge categories</li><li>application area</li><li>setting</li><li>sample question, Level 3, about acid rain. 65% of Finnish students correctly answered the question, while 43% at the OECD average</li></ul>Competence areas:<br /><ul><li>Finland -- 70 points above the OECD average</li><li>70 points is approximately one proficiency level</li><li>Scandinavian countries are close to the OECD average. Why? The Finnish answer: teacher training, students try harder, they take PISA seriously, fewer empty answers. The Scandinavian answer: Finnish teaching methods are old fashioned</li></ul>Low achievers vs. high achievers<br /><ul><li>Finland -- few low achievers</li><li>Scandinavia -- performance even on all 6 levels</li><li>Hungary, Poland, Estonia, Korea -- profile similar to Finland's</li><li>UK, USA, New Zealand, Japan, Germany, France -- opposite profile to Finland's</li></ul>Performance within schools vs. performance between schools<br /><ul><li>Finland -- low variation between schools</li><li>Germany, Czech Republic -- high variation between schools</li><li>e.g. Germany -- already differentiation at the age of PISA testing (15)</li><li>if PISA took place one year later, Finland would have a bigger difference within the age group</li></ul>Interest of Finland<br /><ul><li>high human development index leads to less interest in school</li><li>Finland's interest in science <span style="font-weight: bold;">lower </span>than OECD level</li></ul>Education policy (with PISA data)<br /><ul><li>science teaching from teacher education, local curriculum, learning materials</li><li>Finland's national curriculum, textbooks, teacher training, responsible for high scores in PISA scientific literacy</li><li>Japan -- <span style="font-style: italic;">juku </span>responsible<br /></li></ul>Main cornerstones of education policy:<br /><ul><li>consistent and long-term policy</li><li>commitment to a knowledge society</li><li>equality e.g. effective special education</li><li>local power of education</li><li>culture of trust in the education system </li><li>budget: Finland 65.3%, OECD average 53.2%</li><li>discipline: Finland 96%, OECD average 80.5%</li><li>access: Finland 97%, OECD average 76%</li><li>school size: Finland (less than 20 students) 50%, OECD average 47% of class size 21-25 students<br /></li></ul>Finland's PISA head teacher report: <ul><li>91.7% pubic schools</li><li>OECD: 82.7%</li><li>97.5% reported that 99% of funding came from the government</li><li>64.3% of students not divided by ability</li></ul>Science subjects in school:<br /><ul><li>grades 1-4 -- integrated curriculum: environment and natural studies, 9 hours per week</li><li>grades 5-6 -- integrated curriculum: Biology/geography - 1.5 hours per week; Physics and Chemistry - 1 hour per week</li><li>grades 7-9 -- separate curriculum</li><li>grades 10-12 -- separate curriculum</li><li>Korea -- primary - integrated, 2 hours per week</li></ul>Finnish science curriculum<br /><ul><li>much of content reflected in PISA</li><li>separate science at grades 7-9</li><li>PISA - lifelong learning capacity</li><li>OECD definition of literacy fits well with science goals in Finland</li></ul>Textbooks<br /><ul><li>often responsible for most of the teaching</li><li>good in Finland</li><li>many contextual relationships in textbooks</li><li>e.g. science and humans, science and society</li></ul>Science teacher education<br /><ul><li>subject teachers (grade 7-9, upper secondary) study one major and one minor e.g. math and Chemistry</li><li>primary teachers (grade 1-6) study 13 subjects </li><li>subject teacher education 3+2 years (3 years Bachelor's, 2 years Master's)<br /></li><li>BA/BS - major and minor studies -- similar to other students, begin pedagogy and communication studies</li><li>MA/MS level - e.g. history of science, pedagogical theory (undertaken at the university), teaching practice (schools), thesis (either in the subject or in pedagogy)</li></ul>The University of Helsinki's teacher education programs:<br /><ul><li>11 faculties, 6 have teacher education</li><li>work together to plan the teacher education curriculum</li><li>subject knowledge and skills</li><li>pedagogical knowledge and skills</li><li>competence for continuous professional development</li></ul>Teaching methods for science<br /><ul><li>not much research</li><li>some research after LUMA</li><li>Norris et al. (1996) -- teacher's pedagogy conservative, traditional, lots of practical work</li><li>Simola (2005) -- teachers supported by trust in teachers, "traditional" role believed in and accepted</li></ul>Summary<br /><ul><li>Pehkonen, Antee, and Lavonen (2007) -- education policy, national core curriculum, teacher education, students good understanding in reading</li><li>Aho, Pitkanen, and Sahlberg -- stable environment, educational reform, comprehensive school, interaction of education with other sectors</li><li>obvious reasons:</li></ul><ol><li>Finnish culture -- trust in education, status of teachers</li><li>education policy -- widely accepted vision of knowledge-based society, devolution of power, trust</li><li>comprehensive school -- goals for science education and textbooks, headmaster as pedagogical director, school practice e.g. lunch, special education</li><li>teacher education -- the old fashioned way, respected, 5 year training<br /></li></ol>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-45315888886368509592011-07-13T04:50:00.001-07:002011-07-13T05:21:30.197-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education System: Steering and Financing of Educational Services in FinlandTimo Lankinen spoke about the steering and financing of the educational services in Finland, addressing the economics and administration of education.<br /><br />Here are the notes from his presentation:<br /><br />Features of the Finnish education system:<br /><ul><li>equal opportunities</li><li>regional accessibility</li><li>decentralized since the 1990s -- municipally administered</li><li>publicly funded</li><li>free, e.g. meals, travel, materials (no university fees either)</li><li>state financial aid scheme</li><li>learning environment -- individual attention, innovation, recognition of prior learning</li><li>virtuous cycle of teaching, e.g. low acceptance rate to teacher education</li><li>Welfare State</li></ul>Structure of the education system:<br /><ul><li>polytechnics -- creation was the largest reform in the 1990s (upgraded to higher education level)</li><li>polytechnic Master's degrees, after three years of work experience</li><li>expansion and amalgamation of universities. Universities are under state control, while polytechnics are under municipal or company control</li><li>students in education -- lower enrollment, less population in age cohort</li><li>expenditure: 10 billion Euros overall, basic education 36.5% of expenditure</li></ul>Pre-primary and basic education<br /><ul><li>six-year-olds have the right to (free) schooling, but the municipalities organize care. This way children are prepared before basic education. (Day care teachers are trained in universities.)</li><li>basic education -- from 7 to 16 years. Class teachers for the first six years, then subject teachers for the last three years</li><li>local authorities assign a place, but there is school choice </li><li>maintained by municipalities </li><li>basic education core curriculum -- a national core curriculum, from the Board of Education but administered in the local system</li></ul>History of Finnish Education<br /><ul><li>Reforms 1972-1977 to comprehensive school from a parallel school</li><li>core curriculum reviewed in 1985, 1994, and 2004 -- strengthened the role of the municipality, strengthened special needs education, increased the importance of home-school relation</li></ul>Post-comprehensive schools<br /><ul><li>new movement to have a combination of vocation school and <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium</span><br /></li><li>more students to initial vocational education -- a growing sector<br /></li><li>97% of students go directly to upper secondary school</li><li>general education allows eligibility to further studies</li><li>polytechnic students are also eligible for higher education</li></ul>Matriculation exam<br /><ul><li>based on the national curriculum</li><li>four tests minimum: mother tongue (Finnish or Swedish), mathematics, foreign language, general</li></ul>Vocational Education and Training<br /><ul><li>work-based learning</li><li>apprentice based training</li><li>licence from ministry, but provided by municipalities or companies</li><li>Initial vocational education and training: 53 qualifications, 116 study programs</li><li>qualifications by registered vocational education and training providers </li><li>qualifications set by the National Board of Education<br /></li><li>different ways to acquire a qualification -- curriculum based and demonstration based</li></ul>Higher Education<br /><ul><li>universities and polytechnics</li><li>universities -- state</li><li>polytechnics -- most municipal or private</li></ul>Adult education<br /><ul><li>flexible way for adults to study</li></ul>Steering of Educational Services<br /><ul><li>national development plans set guidelines every five years</li><li>legislation reformed in 1999. Decision-making to the providers level</li><li>registered education providers, e.g. vocational education -- local but national approval</li><li>national core curriculum and vocational qualifications at basic, <span style="font-style: italic;">gymnasium</span>, and vocational levels</li><li>teacher education of high quality</li><li>national requirements of teachers</li><li>financing</li><li>evaluation a central role of the provider. High trust in providers (no inspectorate)</li><li>quality management at the provider's level</li></ul>The Constitution<br /><ul><li>educational rights (Section 16):</li><li>the right to education free of charge</li><li>public authorities must provide the opportunity</li><li>freedom guaranteed</li><li>the <span style="font-style: italic;">Saame</span> -- constitutional rights to cultural autonomy. The <span style="font-style: italic;">Saame </span>Parliament has educational influence. Some schools in the <span style="font-style: italic;">Saame </span>language</li><li>equal rights for national languages (Section 17), Finnish and Swedish</li></ul>The Finnish National Board of Education<br /><ul><li>first developed in 1991</li><li>responsible for the administration of education at all levels</li></ul>Evaluation by the Finnish National Board of Education<br /><ul><li>assesses learning outcomes at basic and upper secondary education</li><li>provides self-assessment</li><li>only uses samples (5,000-6,000 students), does not test the entire age cohort </li><li>reports at age/subject</li><li>results not published at the school level, only national</li></ul>Role of the municipality<br /><ul><li>Constitution (Section 21) -- self government, municipal tax</li><li>416 municipalities</li><li>public administration mainly local</li><li>expenditure accounts for 30% of total public sector and 2/3 public consumption</li><li>50% on welfare and health, 25% on education </li><li>municipalities cooperate with each other, e.g. vocational schools and polytechnics (voluntary) and health care (obligatory)<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-14688697086850609882011-07-13T04:45:00.000-07:002011-07-13T04:49:47.329-07:00Special Features of the Finnish Education SystemThe Finnish National Board of Education organized a conference entitled Special Features of the Finnish Education System, which took place between 31 March and 2 April 2008. It addressed these special features and Finland's success in PISA.<br /><br />I was lucky enough to attend this conference. The following posts will contain my notes from this conference.Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-86795840668460515772011-07-11T07:13:00.000-07:002011-07-11T07:24:09.727-07:00PISA Under Examination: Bob Cowan's Closing SpeechBob Cowan closed the Symposium with a speech called, "Currencies, contexts, and Cassandra: whose truths are true and where do we go from here?"<br /><br />The notes:<br /><br />Currency - what counts as good exchange value<br />Cassandra - following (not) what seems to be good policy<br /><br />PISA - an attractive topic:<br /><ul><li>We have positioned ourselves in PISA in a number of roles</li><li>error in curriculum thought </li><li>political science problem</li><li>a comparison of political power into forms of governance</li><li>state-of-the-art empirical work</li><li>media event</li></ul>PISA - loosely speaking, is "comparative education"<br /><ul><li>it compares one with the other</li><li>50 tears out of date - comparative education is not doing that anymore</li><li>is Big Science -- asks a question and makes it as powerful as it can</li><li>costs money</li><li>politics of the birth of PISA -- what are they?</li><li>politics of its death<br /></li></ul>Jullien (1817) - A [positivist] Science of Comparative Education<br /><ul><li>PISA part of the trajectory of comparative education</li><li>the motif of the diffusion of best practice</li></ul>Rashomon PISA:<br /><ul><li>Japanese fable of two different stories of a death in the woods</li><li>admiring the technical skills of PISA</li><li>historical perspective and connections and disconnection with Sputnik, Cold War, politics of governance</li><li>disciplinary technology of PISA -- Foucault</li><li>Weber -- rationalization of the world</li><li>upsetting quality of PISA e.g. Gerry Mac Ruiarc<br /></li><li>issues of immigration -- why are the Turks not improving?</li><li>"result riddles" -- e.g. deciphering the Finnish result riddle</li><li>political positioning by Education Ministries of PISA as irrelevant as a GPS</li><li>positioning of PISA by identity politics</li><li>PISA as an ideology (at the international level)<br /></li></ul>The scientification of policy<br /><ul><li>Jullien's motif</li><li>the motif from the political plea (in neo-liberal discourses) e.g. USA, Australia</li></ul>The politicization of science<br /><ul><li>numbers</li><li>cultural significance and magic of numbers<br /></li><li>as political resistance</li><li>as victory<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-32381713654062932992011-07-11T06:54:00.000-07:002011-07-11T07:12:38.975-07:00PISA Under Examination: Daniel Trohler's Keynote SpeechDaniel Trohler gave a keynote speech entitled, "Concepts, cultures, and comparisons: PISA and the German discontents."<br /><br />The notes are as follows:<br /><br />2002, the University of Heidelberg, Uni Spiegel: Lecture series: Are we still the educational elite?<br /><ul><li>in response to PISA</li><li>"are we still the people of poets and thinkers?"</li><li>PISA a cultural crisis</li><li>no country reacted the same</li><li>created a market for PISA</li></ul>Caused by a clash of two different traditions.<br /><br />Five steps:<br /><ol><li><span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span>: competence, knowledge </li><li>clash of cultures</li><li>educational "system"</li><li>real world and challenges</li><li>double discontent</li></ol>Germans are either pro- or anti-PISA<br /><ul><li>in defense -- cite concept of<span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;"> Bildung</span></span><br /></li><li>distinction between useful/useless knowledge</li></ul>PISA -- no measurement of curriculum in the English language , but in German "ability" translates to <span style="font-style: italic;">Grundbildung</span>, or foundation, knowledge.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Grundbildung</span> translates as literacy, but also as competence.<br /><br />Married/connected concepts of <span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span>, or the aim of knowledge, and <span style="font-style: italic;">Kompetenz. </span><br /><br />This contrasts with knowledge, or <span style="font-style: italic;">Wissen. </span><br /><ul><li>There was much discussion in Germany about these relationships</li><li>inward <span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span> vs. adjustment to the outer world</li><li><span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span> -- "purposeless" knowledge not codifiable</li><li>PISA -- value for money, ideology's cancer</li></ul>The clash of cultures<br /><ul><li>American pragmatism<br /></li><li>beginning of discussion in Europe</li><li>"despicable utilitarianism"</li><li>the clash between gentleman and <span style="font-style: italic;">Personlichkeit</span> </li><li><span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span>, or "masters of life" e.g. Humboldt, Goethe, "is unmeasurable"</li></ul>The educational "system", its engineers and cognition psychology<br /><ul><li style="font-style: italic;">Sputnik</li><li>education in the Cold War: emphasis on mathematics, science, foreign languages</li><li>development of human capital theory<br /></li></ul>Something about the real world and its challenges: What exactly does PISA assess?<br /><ul><li>performance of students</li><li>basic competencies of the next generation</li><li>students' literacy skills</li><li>the educational system</li></ul>The inner and outer harmony and the double discontent:<br /><ul><li>concept of "one world"</li><li>USA - development of industrial and scientific techniques</li><li>PISA - not a specific cultural context: neglecting real-life situations and ignoring cultural competencies</li><li>e.g. Germany: harmonious inner <span style="font-style: italic;">Personlichkeit </span>vs. PISA: harmonious one world</li><li>"inward <span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span>" - Lutheranism</li><li>"one world" - Calvanism</li><li>questioning <span style="font-style: italic;">Bildung</span> questions German national character</li><li>German PISA -- less concerned with international standing, but the differences in German performance</li><li>failure in integrating<br /></li></ul><span style="font-style: italic;"></span>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-33913692310870136262011-07-11T06:47:00.000-07:002011-07-11T06:53:41.808-07:00PISA Under Examination: Bob Cowan's Response to Hannu Simola's Keynote SpeechProfessor Bob Cowan gave an interesting response to Professor Hannu Simola's keynote speech.<br /><br />Here are the notes:<br /><ul><li>UK -- testing makes school/education more efficient -- a myth!</li><li>Hannu Simola demystified the Finnish system</li><li>Contingency -- things we didn't expect, predict; coincidence, accidental happenings, inserted into the historically complex comparative education. A major cause of freedom is accidents, as implied in Simola's paper</li><li>two dimensions of contingency: accident and freedom</li><li>add in convergence, politics</li><li>skeptical about transfer</li></ul>Accidents can play an important role:<br /><ul><li>"Only good teams are lucky" -- Finnish ice hockey coach</li><li>this was not planned</li><li>Vanhanen -- IQ testing -- Finland scores higher in PISA than IQ tests would indicate</li><li>Civil War - Reds thought they would get teacher support, but very low<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-45391049700964319692011-07-11T05:42:00.000-07:002011-07-11T06:45:37.307-07:00PISA Under Examination: Hannu Simola's Keynote SpeechHannu Simola gave a keynote speech entitled, "Education policy and contingency: Belief, status, and trust behind the Finnish PISA miracle."<br /><br />Here are the notes from the speech:<br /><br />Comparative studies in education are now more popular than ever, thanks to PISA. Novoa and Yariv-Marshal (2003) called them "soft comparisons."<br /><br />Contingency as uncertainty:<br /><ul><li>"age of contingency"</li><li>double meaning of contingency</li><li>"the art of playing"</li><li>Hautamaki (2008) in reference to Finland's performance PISA 2006: "chance encounter, a lucky constellation"</li><li>the concept of contingency -- does it explain Finland in PISA?</li></ul><ol><li>high belief in schooling</li><li>teaching respected</li><li>comprehensive school trusted</li></ol><ul><li>why do these three beliefs exist?</li><li>there is little research comparing Finnish education to other Nordic countries</li></ul>Hypothesis for Finland's success in PISA -- High belief in schooling:<br /><ul><li>"late bloomer"</li><li>e.g. compulsory education</li><li>e.g. expansion of schooling</li><li>e.g. late construction of the Welfare State</li><li>e.g. late modernization of the occupational structure</li><li>e.g. most recently left agrarian lifestyle, even compared to Nordic countries </li><li>the "high belief" in schooling came from these examples</li><li>they happened at the same time -- a collective experience</li></ul>Hypothesis for Finland's success in PISA -- High status of comprehensive school teachers<br /><ul><li>teaching popular, especially in the primary years<br /></li><li>an accepted profession for upper social strata</li><li>10% acceptance rate to teacher training programs</li><li>requirement of MA</li></ul>Hypothesis for Finland's success in PISA -- Requirement for teachers to have an MA coincided with comprehensive school reform<br /><ul><li>1971 Act -- primary school teaching courses moved to universities</li><li>MA model not proposed by the government</li><li>1977 -- teaching degrees now MA level</li><li>this coincides with the comprehensive school reforms -- the MA model was accepted because of this </li></ul>Hypothesis for Finland's success in PISA -- High trust in comprehensive school<br /><ul><li>1990s -- era of trust officially began</li><li>prescribed teaching, curriculum, school inspectorate all abandoned</li><li>the reforms of the 1990s -- restructuring of the steering of education</li><li>recession 1991-1993 -- budget cuts in education/schooling strengthened the judicial position of the municipalities</li><li>Finland's school system one of the most decentralized in Europe</li><li>competing coalitions of the national QAE of compulsory schooling, e.g. Ministry of Education and Finnish National Board of Education</li><li>Finnish National Board of Education: "We have no control over anything. This is our biggest weakness."</li></ul>Hypothesis for Finland's success in PISA: The recession forced a move to evaluation-based goal steering<br /><ul><li>ironically created the trust in the system<br /></li></ul>Contingency as freedom:<br /><ul><li>different levels of conjunction -- changes happened all at once</li><li>coinciding of teacher training and comprehensive school reforms</li><li>concurrent municipal control and comprehensive school governance</li><li>this gave freedom for the policy actors</li></ul>Conclusions:<br /><ul><li>"constructive effects of human action: consequences that may be sweeping and far reaching but rarely foreseeable or suspected." - Dahler-Larsen (2007) </li><li>focus on how schools change reforms rather than how reforms change schools</li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-28724710309007950842011-07-11T05:24:00.000-07:002011-07-11T05:41:52.293-07:00PISA Under Examination: Julio Carabana's Keynote SpeechJulio Carabana gave a keynote speech called, "Why do the results of immigrant students depend so much on their country of origin?"<br /><br />The notes from the speech are as follows:<br /><br />Before PISA:<br /><ul><li>various studies concerning immigrant students, e.g. Sharit (1990) Israeli differences: Sephardic, Ashkenazi, Arabs</li></ul>After PISA:<br /><ul><li>more data, e.g. country of origin, first or second generation, parental education, age at immigration, language spoken at home</li><li>e.g. Belgium: differences among Flemish/French-speaking groups, the differences among the groups depending on country of origin and school language </li><li>e.g. New Zealand: also differences related to country of origin</li><li>PISA allows us to see data of students of the same country of origin in different educattion systems, e.g. Turks in Germany, Belgium, Austria, Denmark, Switzerland, e.g. former Yugloslavians in Germany, Austria, Luxembourg. --> These immigrants had similar performances in PISA in the different countries</li><li>PISA 2003: e.g. Chinese in Hong Kong, New Zealand, Australia, e.g. Italians in Italy, Luxembourg, e.g. Hispanics in the USA and Latin America</li><li>PISA 2006: e.g. Koreans in New Zealand and Australia</li><li>PISA 2006: Turkish immigrants in Austria and Denmark score lower than Turks in Turkey</li></ul>Emigration:<br /><ul><li>has very little impact on students' scores</li><li>score similarly to their country of origin</li><li>not much convergence</li><li>often worse scores in "destination" country for Turkey, Spain, and Italy</li></ul>How do we explain this? <br /><br />Hypotheses:<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">What do some immigrants take from their home country to the "destination country"?<br /></span><ul><li>long-lasting effect</li><li>something lasting, resilient, pervasive, and powerful</li></ul><span style="font-style: italic;">Things they are not:<br /></span><ul><li>home conditions e.g. wealth</li><li>social, political, economic conditions in the home country</li><li>schools in either country</li><li>status of families: socio-economic or cultural </li></ul><span style="font-style: italic;">Something cultural: </span><br /><ul><li>e.g. Confucianism (Asia), Fatalism (Muslims), Protestant/Catholic</li><li>which moral tradition is so pervasive and powerful that it (almost) completely neutralizes the influence of new countries? <br /></li><li>keep in mind immigrants want to succeed more than "natives"</li><li>non-religious influences succeed most e.g. China, India</li><li>Flynn effect: IQ changes over time</li><li>cognitive ability is resilient: differences of cognitive ability of different groups (controversial). This hypothesis has dangers (moral, political, personal)</li><li>Australian immigrants out-perform their cousins (e.g. Chinese)</li></ul><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"></span>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-2887088811259613772011-07-11T05:07:00.000-07:002011-07-11T05:23:28.585-07:00PISA Under Examination: Petra Stanat's Keynote SpeechPetra Stanat gave a keynote speech entitled, "Conditions of Immigrant Students' Educational Success -- Evidence from PISA."<br /><br />The notes from the speech:<br /><br />Preliminary remarks on PISA:<br /><ul><li>neither all good nor all bad</li><li>has strengths and limitations</li><li>can answer some questions but is silent on others</li><li>one piece of the puzzle of evidence-based educational policy and practice</li><li>strengths and limitations regarding immigrant students</li></ul>Starting points:<br /><ul><li>issue of immigrants</li><li>schools a central role in integration</li><li>immigrant students lag behind others</li><li>potential of PISA: How successful are immigrant students in school? What determines their achievement?</li><li>limitations of PISA: What can be done to improve the situation?</li></ul>Immigrants in Germany:<br /><ul><li>temporary immigrants post-World War II: "guest workers," asylum, refugees -- expected to return home</li><li>ethnic Germans from USSR and Eastern Europe: granted citizenship</li><li>no good data on immigration of that time</li><li>2000: accepted that Germany is a country of immigrants</li><li>PISA: 22% of students have an immigrant background, e.g. Turkey, Eastern Europe, other (52%)</li></ul>How successful are immigrants in school?<br /><ul><li>immigrants not as academically successful: vocational school 44% non-German, <span style="font-style: italic;">Gymnasium</span> 14% non-German</li><li>tracking patterns? Does it discriminate against immigrants? Differences in achievement -- specifically with German language skills</li><li>determinants of educational success of immigrants: national/societal level, system level, school type - which track?, community level, school level, classroom level, teacher level, student and family level<br /></li></ul>What determines immigrant students' success?<br /><ul><li>do students who live and learn in segregated settings achieve less than those in an integrated environment? More influence from students of lower socio-economic status, except Turkish students, especially in schools with over 40% Turkish students</li><li>reading literacy effects (immigration) biggest influence of another language at home. First vs. Second generation -- improvement in all groups except for students of Turkish or Italian background</li></ul>What can be done to improve immigrant student achievement?<br /><ul><li>bilingual support: immersion vs. transitional programs. Explicit approach: summer camp settings, focus on form, grammar lessons. Implicit approach: drama lessons. The explicit group performed better, but not in a statistically significant manner.</li></ul>Conclusions<br /><ul><li>studies like PISA provide important comparative information on the situation of immigrant students</li><li>data like this can help identify determinants of success at this level</li><li>immigrants need targeted second-language support</li><li>interventions should be clearly defined and start early</li><li>more research is needed<br /></li></ul>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-1621165959669364722010-12-07T08:39:00.001-08:002010-12-07T08:48:32.342-08:00PISA 2009 Scores ReleasedToday, 7 December 2010, the PISA scores from the 2009 surveys were released by the OECD.<div><br /></div><div>Finland maintained its top outcome in PISA. </div><div><br /></div>Here is the announcement from the OECD this morning:<div></div><div><br /></div><div><a href="http://www.oecd.org/document/12/0,3343,en_21571361_44315115_46623628_1_1_1_1,00.html">http://www.oecd.org/document/12/0,3343,en_21571361_44315115_46623628_1_1_1_1,00.html</a></div><div><br /></div><div>More to follow soon...</div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-27420656918243120692010-08-24T09:01:00.000-07:002010-08-24T09:25:46.514-07:00PISA Under Examination: Gerry Mac Ruairc's Keynote SpeechGerry Mac Ruairc gave a keynote speech at the symposium entitled, "Ticking the Boxes: A Critical Examination of the Process of PISA Testing from a Student Perspective."<div><br /></div><div>Here are the notes from the speech:</div><div><br /></div><div>Testing:</div><div><ul><li>technologies of power surveillance</li><li>impacts of testing: high-stakes and low-stakes</li></ul><div>Unintended consequences of policy developments:</div></div><div><ul><li>what are they? </li><li>need to watch them</li><li>no one sets out to damage, but unintended consequences do that</li><li>alliances: neo-liberal, neo-conservative, neo-Middle class </li><li>accountability</li><li>measurement</li></ul><div>Policy of testing in Ireland</div></div><div><ul><li>began in 2008 with 7/8 year olds and 11/12 year olds</li><li>results not centrally collated - within schools</li><li>reviewed during Whole School Inspection</li><li>must report scores to parents</li><li>vertical system of testing</li><li>15 year olds and 18 year olds subject to more standardized testing</li><li>TIMSS, PIRLS, PISA</li></ul>Ireland </div><div><ul><li>small schools </li><li>8 schools have less than 50 students, 291 schools had greater than 500 students, and 238 students had 300-499 students.</li><li>voluntary secondary schools in Ireland: privately owned, charge fees but publicly funded, Catholic or the Church of Ireland</li><li>community and comprehensive schools</li><li>vocational schools with a working class profile</li></ul><div>General trends:</div></div><div><ul><li>commitment to knowledge economy</li><li>commitment to education</li></ul><div>Ireland in PISA:</div></div><div><ul><li>above average in math and science</li><li>5th or 6th place in reading</li></ul><div>PISA 2006 Ireland:</div></div><div><ul><li>165 schools randomly selected</li><li>mix from different schools, e.g. secondary, vocational</li><li>4585 students </li><li>5 different grades (Irish 1-5)</li><li>high level of agreement to participate</li><li>Reading Literacy Level 1 or below: 12.2% (OECD average: 20.1%)</li><li>Science Literacy Level 1 or below: 15.3%</li></ul><div>Socio-economic groups and testing:</div></div><div><ul><li>language and linguistic discontinuity</li><li>choice of language use intended or unintended?</li><li>social class achievement in PISA: working class - lower achievement, middle class - higher achievement</li><li>curriculum vs. culture</li><li>multiple-choice answers - linguistic choices of the working class</li></ul><div>Research on PISA 2009 - "PISA girls"</div></div><div><ul><li>disadvantaged, inner-city girls</li><li>"opportunistic" sampling</li><li>didn't know what the test was looking for</li><li>Principal talked about the timing and the intensity of the process</li><li>school PISA coordinator talked of "students wilting," "too intense" process, "what monster is this feeding," "rat in a lab" scenario</li><li>ticking the boxes just to "get rid of it"</li><li>girls' view - upset by answering questionnaires about lifestyle</li><li>impact on engagement - interested at first, but then just ticking boxes</li><li>issues of confidentiality - names of booklets</li><li>didn't try as hard because of not getting results back</li><li>the need for calculators - five grade levels in the room. Students were too embarrassed to ask for calculators</li><li>personal nature of items on questionnaires: too "nosy," felt swayed by the socio-economic nature of questions</li><li>negative sense of self: not willing to write about their parents' professions, some lied, bias of jobs listed for parents - not "normal" jobs in a deprived area</li></ul><div>Conclusion:</div></div><div><ul><li>need to engage with student perspectives on the testing process</li><li>need to dig deeper an enrich our understanding of socio-economic level</li><li>need to consider the impact of socio-economic status</li></ul></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-12720314283619049582010-08-24T08:48:00.001-07:002010-08-24T08:58:23.353-07:00PISA Under Examination: Katharina Maag Merki's Keynote SpeechKatharina Maag Merki gave a keynote speech at the symposium entitled, "Central Exit Exams as an Instrument to Improve School Effectiveness? Results of an Empirical Study in Germany." <div><br /></div><div>The notes from the speech are as follows:</div><div><ul><li>Exit exams - comparison of student achievement under centralized and decentralized exit exams. </li><li>Students' motivation and learning strategies have no negative effect in the individual learning of students.</li></ul></div><div>There is no consistent picture on the effects of implementation of exams on school processes.</div><div><ul><li>Germany vs. the USA - differences in testing systems. </li><li>Bremen, for example, has decentralized local exams but centralized state exams. </li><li>There is an overlap in achievement in Germany between the <i>Hauptschule, Realschule, and Gymnasium</i></li><li><i></i>There is a lack of standards in assessment</li></ul><div>Problems:</div></div><div><ul><li>students with the same achievement levels are recommended to different tracks</li></ul><div>Proposed:</div></div><div><ul><li>central "A-level" exams</li><li>e.g. Bremen in 2008 had centralized exams for basic and advanced studies</li></ul><div>There was no real difference in achievement between centralized and decentralized exams at the basic level.</div></div><div><br /></div><div>Advanced math increased in achievement.</div><div><br /></div><div>Advanced English showed improvement in the first year, but a decrease afterwards.</div><div><br /></div><div>Conclusion: There is no effect of centralized exit exams on achievement. </div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-33316540086487554872010-08-24T08:02:00.000-07:002010-08-24T08:30:37.837-07:00PISA Under Examination: David Scott's Keynote SpeechDavid Scott gave a keynote speech entitled, "PISA, International Comparisons, Epistemic Paradoxes." <div><br /></div><div>Here are the notes from the speech:</div><div><br /></div><div>The capacity and ability to know each other's minds, in terms of PISA.</div><div><br /></div><div>Two forms of knowledge:</div><div><ol><li>knowledge sets, skills, dispositions, capacities</li><li>reformed knowledge sets, skills, dispositions: performative capacities, e.g. exams</li></ol><div>Performative knowledge: Wash-back consequences across:</div><div><ul><li>teaching and learning</li><li>the individual</li><li>nations</li></ul><div>Washback consequences: different in different cases and situations.</div></div></div><div><br /></div><div>Assessment: the traditional view:</div><div><ul><li>true score</li><li>errors in testing</li></ul><div>False psychometric beliefs:</div></div><div><ul><li>direct process of examination</li><li>no background to knowledge</li><li>no internal transformation: when a person is tested, no change occurs when they are tested. The original knowledge set transforms to a performative knowledge set</li><li>no washback effect: no external transformation. The curriculum is reformed because of standardized tests.</li><li>unidirectional linear process: no bidirectionality. There is forward and backward flow. The original assessment is unreliable.</li><li>conflating lower and higher level skills: knowledge of facts vs. synthesis of basic facts - an example of the construct being tested</li><li>conflating capacity with performance: "translate" for purposes of test</li><li>culture-free testing vs. national values</li><li>no problem with transfer</li></ul><div>PISA:</div></div><div><ul><li>develops a certain type of knowledge</li><li>curriculum-free testing doesn't really exist</li><li>comparison of different curricula, pedagogies, testing approaches</li><li>different samples, different values to knowledge, different views of evidence, different national idioms</li><li>the task of PISA is to iron out these differences</li><li>"imperfect caricatures" of all knowledge bases under consideration. (Fair testing is very hard to do)</li></ul><div>Indicators measured in PISA:</div></div><div><ul><li>quiet place to study: what does this mean?</li><li>number of books at home: socio-economic status correlation. Number does not equal influence.</li></ul><div>Indicators are hard to develop. Testers search for indicators which have:</div><div><ul><li>Perceived Task Value: washback effect</li><li>Motivational effect - difference among children and nations</li><li>Ironed out ambiguity (this, however, reduces complexity and depth)</li></ul>A test is a performance. Response to a test is in relation to the types of answer they think are required. </div></div><div><br /></div><div>PISA has become a league table ordering a nation's achievement. A league table cannot provide us with useful information. There is a need to design instruments that take into account other variables, a table for improvement, not achievement.</div><div><br /></div><div>Foucault: "Examination" - Discipline and Punishment</div><div><ul><li>10 pages about education</li><li>a test: hierarchy, normalizing judgement</li><li>allows society to construct individuals in certain ways</li><li>transforms the economy of visibility into the exercise of power</li><li>introduces the individual into the field of documentation</li><li>making each individual a case</li></ul><div>Conclusion:</div></div><div><ul><li>hierarchical organization</li></ul></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-82611187965195486342010-08-24T07:23:00.000-07:002010-08-24T08:03:43.697-07:00PISA Under Examination: David Berliner's Keynote SpeechDavid Berliner gave a keynote speech entitled, "Contexts of High-Stakes Testing: The 'Quality' of the PISA Results and the Challenges of PISA to Definitions of School Knowledge"<div><br /></div><div>Here are the notes from the speech:</div><div><ul><li>PISA - not high-stakes testing in the USA, unlike Germany</li><li>State tests (50 of them) have sanctions </li><li>NAEP (National Assessment of Educational Progress), TIMSS (Trends in Mathematics and Science Survey), AP (Advanced Placement), SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test), ACT (American College Testing) are indicators of quality</li><li>No Child Left Behind </li><li>Same context of interpretation: uncritical acceptance of scores as validation of teachers and school quality</li><li>Scores - a prophesy: transmitting scores into predictions</li><li>Media focus on USA's poor performance in scores</li><li>Press attention - US students "below average"</li><li>PISA 2006 focus on science: Glee in the USA, as newspaper writers like bad news, and it promoted vouchers and charter schools</li><li>High PISA scores come from countries with strong public schools and national standards. *Finland does not*</li><li>High-stakes testing popular in the USA - competition</li><li>Last half of the 20th century was American-dominated in terms of education</li><li>No longer the case as illustrated by PISA</li><li>Perpetuates the myth of failed education</li><li>David Brooks of the New York Times: PISA scores are shaping the nation</li><li>Tom Friedman of the New York Times: USA in PISA is like Slovakia or Portugal, not like Canada or The Netherlands</li><li>USA in PISA at the international average</li></ul><div>Media does not report:</div></div><div><ul><li>high scorers in PISA's Level 6 above the OECD average</li><li>240,000 Finnish students are at Level 6</li><li>7.4 million US students are at Level 6</li><li>this does not indicate decline in education for the USA</li><li>trouble in finding jobs: in the USA, 25% of the top scorers were at Level 6 in scientific literacy. In 2001 there were 758,000 bachelor's degrees in science, although 1/3 of these students did not stay in science. In 2001 there were 160,000 master's degrees in science, but 2/3 of these students do not have science jobs.</li><li>PISA tests not what is learned in schools, but what is learned over life</li><li>USA - wrong performance analysis. PISA purposely unrelated to curriculum and not related to school</li><li>PISA - GDP per capita and number of youth (percentage of school age population) can predict PISA scores, for example in Finland</li><li>USA - breakdown of race: White students (40% of the school-age population) scored similarly to the Japanese in PISA. Minority students score lower.</li><li>in the USA, SAT scores directly correlate to family income, e.g. wealthy students perform well in PISA, the SAT, etc.; poor, minority students do not perform well; Anglo countries have much child poverty</li></ul>US education policy: by 2015, children must be "proficient," but these things are not taken into consideration:<br /><ul><li>the possibility of cheating, giving answers, etc.</li><li>high-stakes testing corrupts schools</li><li>Campbell's Law: whenever a social indicator takes on too much value, the actors/creators will become corrupt</li><li>the narrowing of the US curricula: No Child Left Behind led to an increase in reading and math instruction. The more time devoted to learning must lead to more achievement, but with the exception of No Child Left Behind. Too much drilling? Something is going wrong.</li><li>No Child Left Behind was created to reduce the gap in learning, but the gap has not closed</li></ul><div>England replicated the policy and received the same results:</div></div><div><ul><li>narrowing of curriculum</li><li>only rewarding academic achievement</li><li>narrow view of the "educated child"</li><li>taking time from other subjects to focus on mathematics and reading. In the USA, time was taken from recess, social studies, art, music, and lunch. </li></ul><div>USA has an "apartheid curriculum," for example, areas of low poverty can focus on art and music, while areas of high poverty concentrate on test preparation, mathematics, and reading. </div><div><br /></div><div>This is VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous)</div></div><div><ul><li>we are heading to this world</li><li>we need breadth in the curriculum</li><li>a VUCA world would seem to demand breadth. We need breadth to survive. We won't evolve properly. We need variation of talents and skills to survive.</li></ul><div>19th century goals of education:</div></div><div><ul><li>love of learning</li><li>thinking for oneself</li></ul><div>Howard Gardner:</div></div><div><ul><li>schools have a responsibility to teach morals</li></ul><div>USA data has led to:</div></div><div><ul><li>stopping of napping</li><li>the seven minute lunch</li></ul></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-43827439885882599142010-08-24T05:02:00.000-07:002010-08-24T05:48:07.231-07:00PISA Under Examination: Clara Morgan's Keynote SpeechClara Morgan gave a speech entitled "The OECD's PISA: Unravelling a Knowledge Network"<div><br /></div><div>The notes are as follows:</div><div><br /></div><div>This gives a public policy and political science perspective on the matter.</div><div><br /></div><div>Introduction</div><div><ul><li>intelligence testing</li><li>international testing</li><li>PISA in the Canadian context</li><li>PISA in the knowledge network</li><li>analysis of education in the international context</li><li>transnational governance - a web of transnational networks - operating at different scales</li><li>"scientization" takes out politics</li><li>political interests</li><li>circulation of ideas</li><li>PISA - active implementation on all levels, e.g. ideas of how schools should be run, boomerang pattern of networks</li></ul><div>Rise of Education at the OECD</div></div><div><ul><li>1990s - central to OECD work</li><li>renewed interest in human capital theory - the necessary skills to compete in society</li><li>2002 - Directorate of Education</li><li>educational governance - neo-liberal policies, e.g. competition, parental choice, testing (high-stakes)</li><li>American influence - focus on the indicators of quality of education, e.g. <i>A Nation at Risk, </i>wanted a comparison with similar economies</li><li>link with adult literacy and human capital, e.g. Statistics Canada and ETS adopted by PISA</li><li>creation of PISA</li><li>OECD replaced UNESCO and IEA as leader of education</li><li>1995 - Lahti, Finland - "strategy of student achievement analysis" </li></ul>Constructing the PISA Knowledge Network</div><div><ul><li>PISA an exclusive network, e.g. OECD - exclusive economies, educational experts and researchers, governing board and policy makers</li><li>1990s trend towards large scale assessments</li><li>cultural bias</li><li>OECD needed to get educational expertise: tendering process with Borgogne, ACER, and IEA. ACER won, turned into International Consortium</li><li>PISA creators - advocating a different outcome of education, but not prescribing what to teach</li></ul>Governing Education Through PISA</div><div><ul><li>PISA infrastructure - administration, analysis, and dissemination of results</li><li>Media coverage - "naming and shaming"</li><li>"naming and shaming" - rankings, league tables</li><li>results inform OECD reports</li><li>domestic policy influence</li></ul>Canadian Context</div><div><ul><li>Federal government - little control over compulsory education</li><li>Federal interest - learning, development skills for a knowledge-based economy, transition from school to work supports PISA, not IEA tests</li><li>Provincial interest - performance of compulsory education systems, curricular outcomes</li></ul>Student Achievement Testing in Canada</div><div><ul><li>Provinces/Territories</li><li>National - SAIP, PCAP</li><li>International - PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS</li><li>international benchmarking</li><li>linkages across assessments - promise of improving provincial assessments</li><li>international tests cannot capture the complexities of learning</li></ul>Conclusion</div><div><ul><li>PISA - reinforces a scientific and technical approach to politics of education</li><li>grown to inform educational policy</li><li>has stopped public debate use international testing as a basis for education policy</li><li>democratic vision of school can come from the ordinary</li></ul></div><div><br /></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-63018925758718034992010-08-24T04:28:00.000-07:002010-08-24T04:59:17.494-07:00PISA Under Examination: Tom Popkewitz's Keynote SpeechTom Popkewitz gave a keynote speech entitled, "PISA - Numbers, Standardizing Conduct, and the Alchemy of School Subjects"<div><br /></div><div>The notes from his speech are as follows:</div><div><br /></div><div>A content/context-free test is an illusion.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>The Practical Knowledge of PISA</b> helps us "see" historical assemblages and cultural theses about modes of life. It is like a recipe. Ingredients lead to a final product. PISA does not see the "ingredients." It is seen as a whole, but knowledge is not practical. PISA has become a cultural phenomenon, it is talked about and acted upon.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>The Reason of PISA - Transnational Governance, National Salvation, and the Political Numbers as a Telling truth. </b>Here, numbers are an important part of social science. "Facts" are uniform, objective, and rigorous. Democracy has a correlation with measurement. There is a paradox of numbers: they appear as fact through the making of that fact. </div><div><br /></div><div><b>Numbers and Assessment in Making Equivalences: Global Positioning Systems. </b>PISA monitors student improvement and student performance. A GPS always knows its position. Constant measurement and performance helps locate oneself in the world (Simons) and gives navigational tools (Lindblad). This does not act directly on people.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>PISA: The Alchemy and School Subjects. </b>"The alchemy" is an analogy to medieval practices to think about pedagogical translations. PISA has little relation to interaction and communication of the academic fields. The "practical knowledge" assembles a cultural thesis about the "lifelong learner," a mode of life who the child is and should be. </div><div><br /></div><div><b>PISA as Cultural Thesis of the Lifelong Learner: Who Made the Recipe of Practical Knowledge? </b>A lifelong learner is flexible, active, and collaborative. An uncertain world needs problem solving. This works in a global world with no finishing line. Life continues responsibly. The only choice is to choose.</div><div><br /></div><div><i>Science</i>: has textbooks to emphasize greater participation and problem solving to learn the symbolic systems of science.</div><div><i>Mathematics</i>: has modeling and predicting of real-world phenomena</div><div><i>Disciplinary knowledge</i>: stable, logical, and analytic structures separated from the social and cultural fields in its production.</div><div><i>Scientific Literacy</i>: no consensus across countries. It is NOT a universal language (in textbooks) </div><div><br /></div><div><b>PISA, School Subjects, and Historical Context: The Planning of Science in the Redemption of Society. </b> Science uses the future to reorganize the present. 19th century science went from the mastery of the physical world to the mastery of the social world. Science as planning: it was to predict the future. </div><div><br /></div><div><b>PISA and the "Reason" of Practical Knowledge: Exclusion and Abjections in the Impulse to Include. </b>Alchemy: double gestures -- hope for the future and fears of dangers. Education for all: "all" assumes a unity and a consensus. "All" erases differences and the inscription of psychological and social differences.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Conclusions. </b></div><div>I. PISA is not merely measures of practical knowledge of the future. What is practical knowledge? There are different contexts.</div><div><br /></div><div>II. The politics of school. </div><div><ul><li>Alchemy: knowing occurs as "practical." </li><li>Installation of "shepherds" to guide what is "practical." </li><li>PISA: hope for the future, the dangers, and dangerous of populatoins.</li></ul></div><div>III. The limits of the present.</div><div><br /></div><div>IV. Historical situations: thinking about the present with implications and consequences. </div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-64424760963146063832010-08-24T03:33:00.000-07:002010-08-24T04:27:48.954-07:00PISA Under Examination: Ulf P. Lundgren's Keynote SpeechUlf P. Lundgren gave a keynote speech entitled "PISA as a Political Instrument: the history behind formulating the PISA Programme"<div><br /></div><div>Ulf P. Lundgren is a Professor of Policy and Philosophy of Education at the University of Uppsala and the Director-General of the National Agency of Education in Sweden.</div><div><br /></div><div>The notes from his speech are as follows:</div><div><br /></div><div>The history behind PISA has two interpretations:</div><div><ol><li>a short history</li><li>reforms in policy followed <i>Zeitgeist</i>, the changes in society</li></ol><div>PISA really started in the 1980s. </div></div><div><br /></div><div>Educational measurement began in the 19th century. In 1862, England began assessment and inspection related to outcomes. The measurement related to intelligence testing, along with educational and psychological testing.</div><div><br /></div><div>Education is important for society and individuals. For individuals, education is a link to a new life. Education also has a link to the labor market. The modern evaluation is a social context where everything could be questioned. </div><div><br /></div><div>Assessment techniques developed. The international Examination Inquiry of the 1930s formed an international network of assessment, but few with comparative ambitions.</div><div><br /></div><div>In 1957, Sputnik occurred, and President John F. Kennedy announced that a US man must be first on the moon. The "space race" tied in education to space outcomes. </div><div><br /></div><div>The IEA was founded officially in 1967 and began comparative study. International comparisons became features on political agendae and international comparativeness was born. Human capital theory was established. </div><div><br /></div><div>The 1970s oil crisis increased international competition. International assessments became more important, and international assessments were seen as tools for educational improvements. </div><div><br /></div><div>The Cambridge manifesto in 1972, which encouraged broader methods of educational research (including qualitative research) paralleled the 1970s trend which attacked school systems and statistics in education.</div><div><br /></div><div>In the 1980s, the Welfare Society came under attack. New policies were implemented. Globalization gave new solutions, such as decentralization and marketization of schools. </div><div><br /></div><div>In the US and UK there was a decentralization of policy, but a centralization of inspection. </div><div><br /></div><div>In 1989 the Berlin Wall fell, and in 1992, the USSR ended, which marked the end of the Cold War. Competition was not about domination. A new context for competition began: economic. ICT began to emerge. Teachers began to be seen as professionals. </div><div><br /></div><div>International assessments have changed its context over time.</div><div><br /></div><div>In 1968, the OECD's Centre for Education Research and Innovation (CERI) was started. In the 1980s, the OECD's INES, the education indicators program began. Statistics began to impact upon education policy.</div><div><br /></div><div>INES built up connections and networks in different countries. In 1992, Education at a Glance was born. However, there were problems in finding outcome data. At the time there were only the IEA studies.</div><div><br /></div><div>Tom Alexander of CERI said the OECD needed a new program, as there were validity problems with the IEA studies. They wanted a test that was "content free." ETS (Educational Testing Service) created a broad literacy concept test. Statistics Canada handled the design and data collection. </div><div><br /></div><div>From this came PISA, first administered in 2000, and with those results released in 2001. </div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-83068511440222426372010-08-24T03:09:00.000-07:002010-08-24T04:27:07.042-07:00PISA Under Examination: Opening of the SymposiumThe opening of the symposium was by a panel with Miguel Pereyra, Robert Cowan, Guadalupe Gonzalez Tano, Pilar Teresa Diaz, and German Gonzalez.<div><br /></div><div>Guadalupe Gonzales Tano spoke of:</div><div><ul><li>a clear imbalance in education</li><li>cautions about these surveys</li><li>how surveys such as PISA show places to improve within an education system</li><li>the benchmarks they provide</li></ul><div>Pilar Teresa Diaz spoke of:</div></div><div><ul><li>PISA as an international phenomenon</li><li>how PISA highlights the main problems of society and education</li><li>how PISA diagnoses global problems</li><li>the sensitivity needed with these surveys</li><li>the controversy of PISA, as PISA leaves nobody indifferent</li><li>the fundamental problems in comparative education</li><li>how PISA promotes improvement in education</li><li>how PISA needs to encourage in-depth analysis</li><li>the positive transformation of education</li><li>how PISA points out the problems we face</li></ul><div>German Gonzalez spoke of:</div></div><div><ul><li>PISA as a popular phenomenon</li><li>his role as director of the museum of education</li><li>Plato's views on education: the greatest beauty of body and soul</li><li>how today's world is interested in other aspects of education, as in the economic side</li><li>how PISA needs people with know-how</li></ul><div>Miguel Pereyra spoke of:</div></div><div><ul><li>the founding of CESE in London (1961)</li><li>the symposium, which focuses on PISA, the most complete international assessment thus far</li><li>the media storm following the release of PISA scores</li><li>the OECD creating the best form of international comparison</li><li>how perhaps PISA has become the OECD's "unwanted child"</li><li>the International Education Statistics, InES, which reoriented the efficiency of international indicators in 1986</li><li>PISA's birth in 1986</li><li>how PISA is often misinterpreted</li><li>the difficulty in actual comparison</li><li>how PISA is more than a ranking, it is a tool for the governance of education, and someday will be an international tool for world governance</li><li>the symposium would highlight the problems of PISA and the puzzle that PISA represents</li><li>the problematic scope of PISA -- it illustrates the systems that aren't working</li><li>the media's interpretation of PISA as an X-Ray or snapshot of schools and education systems</li><li>PISA's definition of "literacy," not concerned with didactics</li><li>the "horserace" that PISA has generated</li><li>how PISA measures not only performance, but also school functions</li><li>how PISA's measurement of education is problematic: it comes with rich data and a reservoir of empirical data</li><li>how PISA goes far beyond a test of economic or educational achievement</li><li>how PISA permeates everything </li></ul></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-3200512627238773052010-08-24T02:51:00.000-07:002010-08-24T04:26:25.146-07:00PISA Under Examination: Changing Knowledge, Changing Tests, and Changing Schools (Part Two)The CESE Symposium held on the island of La Palma also hosted a poster exhibition. These are the posters presented at the Symposium:<div><ul><li><b>A Portrait of European Top Performers in Science</b> by Fabio Alivernini, Laura Palmerio, Valerie Tortora, National Institute for the Evaluation fo the Education System, Frascati, Italy</li><li><b>Thinking About PISA and the Participation of the Parents</b> by Claudio Almonacid Aguila, Ana Jimenez Saldana, Daniel Rios Munoz, University of Santiago de Chile</li><li><b>An Investigation of Reasons for Finland's Success in PISA</b> by Jennifer H. Chung, Liverpool Hope University</li><li><b>From the Static to the Dynamic: PISA Items as an Educational Resource</b> by Jose R. Galo Sanchez, Descrtes Project, Institute of Education Technologies, Ministry of Education, Spain; University of Cordoba</li><li><b>PISA, Finland and the Autonomous Community of Madrid </b>by Maria Jose Garcia Ruiz, UNED</li><li><b>Digital Skills Appear in PISA Report: Are Students and Teachers Prepared? </b>by Ana Garcia-Valcarcel, Francisco Javier Tejedor, Anunciacion Quintero, University of Salamanca</li><li><b>Difference of Gender in the Educative Practices and Expectations of Students </b>by Carmen Nieves Perez Sanchez, Moises Betancort, University of La Laguna</li><li><b>PISA on Front Page </b>by Ariadne Runte-Geidel, Diego Sevilla, University of Grenada</li><li><b>The Educational and Sociolabour Guidance Program: An Instrument to Facilitate the Sociolabour Transition </b>by Lidia E. Santana Vega, Jose A Santana Lorenzo, University of La Laguna</li><li><b>Similarities and Differences Between Spanish and Finnish Teachers: Organization of School Time and Space, Selection and Salary</b> by Begona Zamora Fortuny, University of La Laguna</li><li><b>The New Challenges Posted by PISA for a Graduate Programme in Upper Secondary Education Teaching at the National Autonomous University of Mexico </b>by Juan F. Zorilla, UNAM, Mexico</li></ul></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3115755680228088261.post-34204031000321203182010-08-24T02:32:00.000-07:002010-08-24T07:22:42.017-07:00PISA Under Examination: Changing Knowledge, Changing Tests, and Changing SchoolsThe Comparative Education Society in Europe (CESE) held in international symposium in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain from the 23rd to the 26th of November 2009. This was organized by Miguel A. Pereyra, President of CESE and Professor of Comparative Education at the University of Granada. <div><br /></div><div>The Symposium featured these Keynote Speakers: </div><div><ul><li>David C. Berliner of Arizona State University</li><li>Antonio Bolivar of the University of Grenada</li><li>Julio Carabana of the Complutense University of Madrid</li><li>Robert Cowan of the Institute of Education, University of London</li><li>Ulf P. Lundgren of the University of Uppsala</li><li>Katharina Maag Merki of the University of Zurich</li><li>Gerry Mac Ruairc of University College Dublin</li><li>Clara Morgan of Carleton University</li><li>Donatella Palomba of the University of Rome "Tor Vergata"</li><li>Anselmo Roberto Paolone of the University of Rome "Tor Vergata"</li><li>Thomas S. Popkewitz of the University of Wisconsin - Madison</li><li>Javier Salinas of the Complutense University of Madrid</li><li>David Scott of the Institute of Education, University of London</li><li>Daniel Santin of the Complutense University of Madrid</li><li>Hannu Simola of the University of Helsinki</li><li>Petra Stanat of the Freie Universitat Berlin</li><li>Daniel Troehler of the University of Luxembourg</li></ul><div><br /></div></div>Jennifer Chunghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09726872066909675291noreply@blogger.com0