The Historical Roots of the Global Testing Culture in Education

Autores/as

  • Christian Ydesen Aalborg University. Denmark Autor/a
  • Karen Egedal Andreasen Aalborg University. Denmark Autor/a

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14516/fde.710

Palabras clave:

Testing culture, education, international organisations, history

Resumen

This article takes as its starting point the idea that contemporary education is characterised by the presence of a global testing culture. The global testing culture reflects the fact that students’ learning outcomes and learning standards are at the centre of policymakers’ attention all over the world. Thus, the global testing culture plays a significant role in both educational policies and the conditions under which education is practiced in different national contexts. The aim of the article is to offer a brief, select outline of the precursors, antecedents, and preconditions that have promoted and facilitated the rise of our modern day global testing culture. The article is structured according to two chronological stages. The first stage encompasses a confluence of comparative education, the rise of applied psychology, and the transnational organisational structures that began forming in the pre-WWII setting. The second stage features the emergence of the foundations and organisations of the global testing culture in the wake of WWII, a period pre-occupied with educational measurement and comparisons. The article argues that these developments, which built on a framework established mainly during the interwar years, subsequently conflated into a trajectory that was fostered and promoted by policies during the Cold War, and became dominant from the 1990s onwards.

Referencias

Addey, C., Sellar, S., Steiner-Khamsi, G., Lingard, B., & Verger, A. (2017). The rise of international large-scale assessments and rationales for participation. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 47(3), 434-452. doi:

Andreasen, K.E., Kelly, P., Kousholt, K., McNess, E., & Ydesen, C. (2015). Standardised testing in compulsory schooling in England and Denmark: A comparative study and analysis. Bildung und Erziehung, 68(3), 329-348.

Barnett, M.N., & Finnemore, M. (2004). Rules for the world: international organizations in global politics. Ithaca, Nueva York: Cornell University Press.

Beech, J. (2006). The theme of educational transfer in comparative education: A view over time. Research in Comparative and International Education, 1(1), 2-13. doi:

Bengtsson, J. (2008). OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation – 1968 to 2008. París: Centro para la Investigación e Innovación de la Enseñanza.

Bereday, G.Z.F. (1964). Sir Michael Sadler’s «Study of foreign systems of education». Comparative Education Review, 7(3), 307-314.

Bereday, G.Z.F. (1967). Reflections on comparative methodology in education, 1964‐1966. Comparative Education, 3(3), 169-287. doi:

Bieber, T., & Martens, K. (2011). The OECD PISA study as a soft power in education? Lessons from Switzerland and the US. European Journal of Education, 46(1), 101-116.

Biesta, G. (2015). Resisting the seduction of the global education measurement industry: Notes on the social psychology of PISA. Ethics and Education, 10(3), 348-360.

Boel, J. (2016) UNESCO’s Fundamental Education Program, 1946–1958: Vision, Actions and Impact. In Duedahl, P. (Ed.), A history of UNESCO: global actions and impacts (pp. 153-168). Londres: Palgrave Macmillan.

Brickman, W.W. (1966). Prehistory of comparative education to the end of the eighteenth century. Comparative Education Review, 10(1), 30-47.

Brickman, W.W. (2010). Comparative education in the nineteenth century. European Education, 42(2), 46-56. doi:

Bu, L. (1997) International Activism and Comparative Education: Pioneering Efforts of the International Institute of Teachers College, Columbia University. Comparative Education Review 41(4), 413-434.

Bürgi, R. (2012). Bypassing federal education policies. The OECD and the case of Switzerland. International Journal for the Historiography of Education, 1(2), 24-35.

Bürgi, R. (2016). Systemic management of schools: The OECD’s professionalisation and dissemination of output governance in the 1960s. Paedagogica Historica, 52(4), 408-422. doi:

Bürgi, R. & Tröhler, D. (en prensa). Producing the «right kind of people»: The OECD education indicators in the 1960s. In Lindblad, S., Pettersson, D., & Popkewitz, T S. (eds.), Numbers, education and the making of society: International assessments and its expertise (en prensa). Nueva York: Routledge.

Cardoso, M., & Steiner-Khamsi, G. (2017). The making of comparability: Education indicator research from Jullien de Paris to the 2030 sustainable development goals. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 47(3), 388-405. doi:

Carvalho, L.M., & Costa, E. (2015). Seeing education with one’s own eyes and through PISA lenses: Considerations of the reception of PISA in European countries. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 36(5), 638-646. doi: 10.1080/01596306.2013.871449

Christensen, I.L., & Ydesen, C. (2015). Routes of knowledge: Toward a methodological framework for tracing the historical impact of international organizations. European Education, 47(3), 274-288. doi:

Claparède, E. (1911). Experimental pedagogy and the psychology of the child. Nueva York: Edward Arnold.

Connell, R. (2013). The neoliberal cascade and education: An essay on the market agenda and its consequences. Critical Studies in Education, 54(2), 99-112. doi:

Danziger, K. (1998). Constructing the subject: Historical origins of psychological research. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Depaepe, M., & Smeyers, P. (2008). Educationalization as an ongoing modernization process. Educational Theory, 58(4), 379-389. doi:

Dorn, S., & Ydesen, C. (2014). Towards a comparative and international history of school testing and accountability. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 22(115), 1-8.

Duedahl, P. (2016). A history of UNESCO: Global actions and impacts. Londres: Palgrave Macmillan.

Elfert, M. (2013). Six decades of educational multilateralism in a globalising world: The history of the UNESCO Institute in Hamburg. International Review of Education, 59(2), 263-287. doi:

Epstein, E.H. (2018). The Nazi seizure of the International Education Review: a dark episode in the early professional development of comparative education. Comparative Education, 54(1), 49-61. doi:

Fuchs, E. (2004). Educational sciences, morality and politics: International educational congresses in the early twentieth century. Paedagogica Historica, 40(5), 757-784.

Fuchs, E. (2007). The creation of new international networks in education: The League of Nations and educational organizations in the 1920s. Paedagogica Historica, 43(2), 199-209. doi:

Fuchs, E. (2014). History of Education beyond the nation? Trends in historical and educational scholarship. In Bagchi, B., Fuchs, E., & Rousmaniere, K. (Eds.), Connecting histories of education – transnational and cross-cultural exchanges on (post)colonial education (pp. 11-26). Nueva York: Berghahn Books.

Goldstein, H., & Woodhouse, G. (2000). School effectiveness research and educational policy. Oxford Review of Education, 26(3/4), 353-363.

Grek, S. (2009). Governing by numbers: The PISA effect in Europe. Journal of Education Policy, 24(1), 23-37.

Grek, S. (2010). International organisations and the shared construction of policy «problems»: Problematisation and change in education governance in Europe. European Educational Research Journal, 9(3), 396-406. doi:

Harris, A., & Hargreaves, A. (2015). Exceptional effectiveness: Taking a comparative perspective on educational performance. International Congress for School Effectiveness and School Improvement (Serie de artículos 3).

Hearnshaw, L.S. (1979). Cyril Burt, psychologist. Ithaca, Nueva York: Cornell University Press.

Hegarty, S. (2014). From Opinion to Evidence in Education: Torsten Husén’s contribution. In Nordin, A., & Sundberg, D. (Eds.), Transnational policy flows in European education: The making and governing of knowledge in the education policy field (pp. 21-32). Oxford: Symposium Books.

Heyneman, S.P. (2003). The history and problems in the making of education policy at the World Bank 1960-2000. International Journal of Educational Development, 23(3), 315-337. doi:

Hill, D., & Kumar, R. (Eds.). (2009). Global neoliberalism and education and its consequences. Nueva York: Routledge.

Hofstetter, R., & Schneuwly, B. (2013). The International Bureau of Education (1925–1968): A platform for designing a «chart of world aspirations for education». European Educational Research Journal, 12(2), 215-230. doi:

Jones, P.W. (1992). World Bank financing of education. Lending, learning and development. Londres y Nueva York: Routledge.

Keeves, J. (2011). IEA - From the beginning in 1958 to 1990. In Papanastasiou, C., Plomp, T., & Papanastasiou, E.C. (eds.), IEA 1958-2008: 50 years of experiences and memories (pp. 3-40). Amsterdam: The International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement.

Kogan, M. (1979). Education policies in perspective: An appraisal of OECD country educational policy reviews. París: Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económicos.

Kreiner, S., & Christensen, K.B. (2014). Analyses of Model Fit and Robustness. A New Look at the PISA Scaling Model Underlying Ranking of Countries According to Reading Literacy. Psychometrika, 79(2), 210-231. doi:

Kulnazarova, A., & Ydesen, C. (Eds.). (2016). UNESCO without borders: Educational campaigns for international understanding. Nueva York: Routledge.

Landahl, J. (2017). Small-scale community, large-scale assessment: IEA as a transnational network. Ponencia presentada durante el Congreso Europeo para la Investigación Educativa (ECER) en Copenhague, Dinamarca, del 22 al 25 de agosto.

Landsheere, G. (1997). IEA and UNESCO: A history of working co-operation. Recuperado de

Lawn, M. (Ed.). (2008). An Atlantic crossing?: The work of the International Examination Inquiry, its researchers, methods, and influence. Oxford, Reino Unido: Symposium Books.

Lawn, M. (2011). Standardizing the European education policy space. European Educational Research Journal, 10, 259-272. doi:

Lawn, M. (2014). Nordic connexions: Comparative education, Zilliacus and Husén, 1930–1960. In Nordin, A., & Sundberg, D. (Eds.), Transnational policy flows in European education: The making and governing of knowledge in the education policy field (pp. 21-32). Oxford: Symposium Books.

Lewis, S. (2017). Policy, philanthropy and profit: the OECD’s PISA for Schools and new modes of heterarchical educational governance. Comparative Education, 53(4), 518-537.

Lindblad, S., Pettersson, D., & Popkewitz, T.S. (2015). International comparisons of school results: A systematic review of research on large scale assessments in education. Informe de Educational Research project SKOLFORSK. Swedish Research Council. doi:

Lundahl, C. (2016). Swedish education exhibitions and aesthetic governing at world’s fairs in the late nineteenth century. Nordic Journal of Educational History, 3(2), 3-30.

Lundahl, C., & Lawn, M. (2015). The Swedish schoolhouse: A case study in transnational influences in education at the 1870s world fairs. Paedagogica Historica, 51(3), 319-334. doi:

Martens, K. (2007). How to become an influential actor. The «comparative turn» in OECD education policy. In Martens, K., Rusconi, A., & Lutz, K. (Eds.), Transformations of the state and global governance (pp. 40-56). Londres: Routledge.

Masemann, V.L., Bray, M., & Manzon, M. (eds.). (2007). Common interests, uncommon goals: histories of the World Council of Comparative Education Societies and its members. Hong Kong: Comparative Education Research Center, Springer.

Meyer, H.D., & Benavot, A. (Eds.). (2013). PISA; power, and policy: The emergence of global educational governance. Oxford: Symposium Books.

Mitch, D. (2005). Education and Economic Growth in Historical Perspective. EH.Net Encyclopedia, edición de Robert Whaples. Recuperado de: http://eh.net/encyclopedia/education-and-economic-growth-in-historical-perspective/

Moutsios, S. (2009). International organisations and transnational education policy. Compare, 39(4), 469-481.

Niessen, M., & Peschar, J. (1982). Comparative research on education 1975-1980: Review and appraisal. In Niessen, M., & Peschar, J. (Eds.), Comparative research on education: Overview, strategy and applications in Western Europe (pp. 3-36). Hungría: Pergamon Press.

Nordin, A., & Sundberg, D. (eds.). (2014). Transnational policy flows in European education: the making and governing of knowledge in the education policy field. Oxford: Symposium Books.

OECD. (1961). Policy conference on economic growth and investment in education. Washington 16th–20th October 1961. París: OECD Publishing.

OECD. (2016). Trends shaping education 2016. París: OECD Publishing. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/trends_edu-2016-en

Ozga, J., Dahler-Larsen, P., Segerholm, C., & Simola, H. (Eds.). (2011). Fabricating quality in education: Data and governance in Europe. Londres: Routledge.

Papadopoulos, G.S. (2011). The OECD approach to education in retrospect: 1960-1990. European Journal of Education, 46(1), 85-86.

Petterson, D. (2014). The development of the IEA: The rise of large-scale testing. In Nordin, A., & Sunderberg, D. (Eds.), Transnational policy flows in European education (pp. 105-122). Oxford: Symposium Books.

Pettersson, D., Popkewitz, T.S., & Lindblad, S. (2015). On the use of educational numbers: Comparative constructions of hierarchies by means of large-scale assessments. Espacio, Tiempo y Educación, 3(1), 177-202. doi: https://doi.org/10.14516/ete.2016.003.001.10>

Pizmony-Levy, O. (2013). Testing for all: The emergence and development of international assessment of student achievement, 1958-2012 (Tesis doctoral). Indiana University, Indiana.

Plum, M. (2014). A «globalised» curriculum–international comparative practices and the preschool child as a site of economic optimisation. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 35(4), 570-583. doi:

Popkewitz, T.S. (2013). Rethinking the history of education: Transnational perspectives on its questions, methods, and knowledge. Nueva York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Postlethwaite, N.T. (1993). Torsten Husen. Prospects: The Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 23(3/4), 677-686.

Purves, A.C. (1987). The evolution of the IEA: A memoir. Comparative Education Review, 31(1), 10-28. doi:

Rasmussen, A. (2001). Tournant, inflexions, ruptures: le moment internationaliste. Mil neuf cent. Revue d’histoire intellectuelle, 19(1), 27-41. Recuperado de

Reese, W.J. (2013). Testing wars in the public schools: A forgotten history. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.

Rizvi, F., & Lingard, B. (2010). Globalizing education policy. Londres: Routledge.

Rose, N. (1999). Powers of freedom: Reframing political thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Rubenson, K. (2008). OECD educational policies and world hegemony. In Mahon, R., & McBride, S. (Eds.), The OECD and transnational governance (pp. 293-314). Vancouver: British Columbia University Press.

Sadler, M. (1930). Introduction. In Boyd, W. (ed.), Towards a new education – A record and synthesis of the discussions on the new psychology and the curriculum at the fifth World Conference of the New Education Fellowship held at Elsinore, Denmark, in August 1929 (pp. 11-17). Londres: A.A. Knopf.

Schriewer, J. (Ed.). (2012). Discourse formation in comparative education. Frankfurt-am-Main: Peter Lang.

Schuller, T. (2005). Constructing international policy research: The role of CERI/OECD. European Educational Research Journal, 4(3), 170-180.

Schuller, T. (2006). International policy research: «Evidence» from CERI/OECD2. In Ozga, J., Seddon, T., & Popkewitz, T.S. (Eds.), World yearbook of education 2006: Education, research and policy (pp. 78 -90). Oxon: Routledge.

Smith, W.C. (Ed.). (2016). The global testing culture: Shaping education policy, perceptions, and practice. Oxford: Symposium Books.

Smyth, J.A. (2005). UNESCO’s international literacy statistics 1950-2000. Material preparado para el Informe de Seguimiento de la Educación Para Todos en el Mundo 2006. La alfabetización, un factor vital. Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura.

Sobe, N.W., & Boven, D.T. (2014). Nineteenth-century world’s fairs as accountability systems: Scopic systems, audit practices and educational data. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 22(118), 1-14. doi:

Sokal, M.M. (1987). Psychological testing and American society, 1890-1930. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

Steiner‐Khamsi, G. (2002). Re‐framing educational borrowing as a policy strategy. In Caruso, M., & Tenorth, H.E. (Eds.), Internationalisierung: Semantik und Bildungsstem in vergleichender Perspektive (pp. 305-343). Frankfurt‐am‐Main: Peter Lang.

Takayama, K., Sriprakash, A., & Connell, R. (2017). Toward a Postcolonial Comparative and International Education. Comparative Education Review, 61, S1-S24. doi:

Townsend, P. (2007). Preface. In Townsend, P. (Ed.), International handbook of school effectiveness and improvement: Part 1 (pp. 3-26). Dordrecht: Springer.

Tröhler, D. (2010). Harmonizing the educational globe. World polity, cultural features, and the challenges to educational research. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 29(1), 5-17. doi:

Tröhler, D. (2015). The medicalization of current educational research and its effects on education policy and school reforms. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 36(5), 749-764. doi:

Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura. (1949). Recomendación relativa a la dirección de los programas escolares con vistas a la paz y la seguridad internacional. Resolución n° 2.513. Consejo Educativo.

Wagemaker, H. (2011). IEA: International studies, impact and transition. In Papanastasiou, C., Plomp, T., & Papanstasiou, E. (Eds.), IEA 1958–2008: 50 years of experiences and memories (pp. 253-272). Amsterdam: International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement.

Wagemaker, H. (2013). International large-scale assessments: From research to policy. In Rutkowski, L., von Davier, M., & Rutkowski, D. (Eds.), Handbook of international largescale assessment: Background, technical issues, and methods of data analysis (pp.11-36). Boca Raton, Florida: CRC.

Walker, D.A. (1976). The IEA six subject survey: an empirical study of education in twenty-one countries. Estocolmo: Almqvist & Wiksell International.

Ydesen, C. (2011). The rise of high-stakes educational testing in Denmark, 1920-1970. Frankfurt-am-Main: Peter Lang.

Ydesen, C. (2013). Educational testing as an accountability measure: Drawing on twentieth-century Danish history of education experiences. Paedagogica Historica, 49(5), 716-733. doi:

Publicado

2019-01-01

Número

Sección

Studies

Cómo citar

The Historical Roots of the Global Testing Culture in Education. (2019). Foro De Educación, 17(26), 1-24. https://doi.org/10.14516/fde.710

Artículos similares

1-10 de 344

También puede Iniciar una búsqueda de similitud avanzada para este artículo.