Understanding PISA’s Attractiveness
Critical Analyses in Comparative Policy Studies
Florian Waldow editor Gita Steiner-Khamsi editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:2nd May '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Offers global perspectives on the uses and abuses of PISA through a comparative lens.
Understanding PISA's Attractiveness examines how policy makers and the media interpret the results of PISA league-leaders, losers, and slippers in ways that suit their own reform agendas. As a result, a myriad of explanations exist as to why an educational system is high or low performing. The chapters, written by leading scholars from Australia, Austria, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, the UK and the USA, provide a fascinating account of why results from PISA and other international large-scale assessments are interpreted and translated differently in the various countries. The analyses in this book bring to light the wide array of idiosyncratic projections into these international tests. In some countries, these tests are also used to scandalise one’s own educational system and to generate quasi-external reform pressure. Compiled by two leading scholars in comparative education, Florian Waldow and Gita Steiner-Khamsi, this book offers a truly global perspective on the uses and abuses of PISA and will be of great interest to students and academics working in educational policy, comparative education and political science and those working on large-scale data sets.
A highly important and timely edited collection on a topic of phenomenal and -alas- ever growing significance. This is a book that brings together the work of a group of internationally known scholars whose writing and influence in the field of education governance research cannot be over-stated. Thoroughly recommended. * Sotiria Grek, Senior Lecturer in Social Policy, University of Edinburgh, UK *
ISBN: 9781350057289
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 553g
272 pages