Koulutusihmeen paradoksit-kirja julkistetaan 16.9. Tiedekulma Porthaniassa

Professori Hannu Simolan uusi kirja ”Koulutusihmeen paradoksit – esseitä suomalaisesta koulutuspolitiikasta” julkistetaan keskiviikkona 16. syyskuuta klo 16 vanhassa Tiedekulmassa Porthaniassa (Yliopistonkatu 3).  Tervetuloa!

Koulutusihmeen paradoksit kokoaa yhteen kasvatussosiologian professori Hannu Simolan keskeisimpiä kirjoituksia koulutuksesta viime vuosikymmenen ajalta. Simola on Suomen kansainvälisesti arvostetuimpia koulutustutkijoita. Teos ilmestyy varsin otolliseen aikaan, sillä kehutut PISA-tulokset oireilevat romahdusta.

Teos avaa uudenlaisen kriittisen mutta samalla realistisen näköalan koulutuksen kehittämiseen. Simolan teksteissä on vahva tieteellinen ja teoreettinen pohja, mutta silti hän päätyy usein käytännöllisiin, vallitsevia totuuksia kyseenalaistaviin johtopäätöksiin. Teos onkin eräänlainen koulutuspoliittisen toisinajattelun käsikirja.

Simola keskittyy esseissään ennen kaikkea suomalaisen koulutuspolitiikkaan ja sen historialliseen kehkeytymiseen. Opettajan, tutkijan ja tinkimättömän ajattelijan auktoriteetilla hän pohtii koulun kehittämisen vaikeutta, markkinaliberalistisen koulutuspolitiikan vaikutuksia sekä Suomen PISA-menestyksen syitä. Miten suomalainen koulu on voinut pärjätä, vaikka se tekee kaiken vastoin valtavirran oppeja?

Lisätietoja: http://vastapaino.fi/kirjat/koulutusihmeen-paradoksit/

Education and residential segregation -seminar

August 19th, 2015, Helsinki University, Finland

Venue: Seminar room 168, Siltavuorenpenger 3 A (Athena building)

Registration & further information: janne.varjo@helsinki.fi

Program:

9.45. Welcome

10.00. Jung, Choong-Dae & Jang, Soomyung: “Residential Segregation and Classroom Peer Effects – Evidence from Learning to Learn in Korea”

10.30. Woo, Myung Suk: “Effects of neighbourhood structure and social processes on student outcomes”

11.00 Kupiainen, Sirkku: ”The role of school, class, and home background in explaining school achievement (GPA), cognitive competence, and motivational attitudes at the end of lower secondary education in the Helsinki Metropolitan Region”

11.30. Lunch

12.30. Kim Mi Sook: “Class Differences in Child Rearing”

13.00. Kim Hye Won“The Effect of Residence Area on Satisfaction of Education – the Case of Gyeonggi-do Province in Korea”

13.30. Varjo, Janne & Kalalahti, Mira: ”The Conceivable Benefits of Being Comprehensive – Finnish Local Education Authorities on Recognising and Controlling the Social Costs of School Choice”

14.00. Coffee

14.30. Jang, Soomyung & Park, Hea Won: “Analysis of the Effect on the student by Residential Segregation – – focusing on the interaction with the family, school, neighbourhood”

15.00. Norola, Meri: ”Well functioning local primary schools – How urban schools overcome areal sosioeconomical challenges in Helsinki”

15.30. Discussion

EDUCATION, SOCIETY AND CULTURE – ESC XVII CONFERENCE

Comparison and Educational Policy-making

Monday 1st of June, 2015, 9.30–20.00

Faculty of Behavioural Sciences, University of Helsinki

Research Unit focusing on the Sociology and Politics of Education (KUPOLI), the Nordic Centre of Excellence (NCoE) Justice through Education in the Nordic Countries (JustEd), the Doctoral Programme of School, Education, Society and Culture (SEDUCE) and the Faculty of Behavioural Sciences invites researchers, teachers and students interested in the sociological and cultural studies of education to the annual ESC conference. The theme of the 17th ESC conference is ”Comparison and Educational Policy-making”.

This year we are honoured to have two excellent keynote speakers Professor Florian Waldow (Humboldt University, Berlin) and Professor Jouni Välijärvi, (Finnish Institute for Educational Research, University of Jyväskylä).

Participants are encouraged to present their own research, or to participate in the conference without presenting. The conference offers a unique opportunity for researchers ranging from undergraduates to professors to meet and discuss of their research in a relaxed atmosphere.

The conference is free of charge and open to the general public. All events will be held at Minerva Square, Floor K2, Siltavuorenpenger 5A.

Program and abstract book.

For more information: www.helsinki.fi/kyk or janne.varjo@helsinki.fi

PROGRAMME

9.30–9.45 Opening of the XVII ESC Conference

9.45–10.45 Professor Jouni Välijärvi, Finnish Institute for Educational Research, University of Jyväskylä: International large scale assessments and national education policy

10.45–11.45 Professor Florian Waldow, Humboldt University, Berlin: “Educational paradise” versus “examination hell”: Projecting images of the “good” and the “bad school” onto PISA top scorers

11.45–13.00 Lunch break

13.00–14.30 Thematic sessions

14.30–15.00 Coffee*

15.00–16.45 Thematic sessions

17.00 Snacks and drinks*

*These are included for the participants.

KEYNOTES

Professor Florian Waldow, Humboldt University, Berlin:

“Educational paradise” versus “examination hell”: Projecting images of the “good” and the “bad school” onto PISA top scorers

Educational reforms are frequently “lent” and “borrowed” across national boundaries. In the course of the last two decades or so, some top scorers in international large-scale assessments such as PISA have become particularly attractive as countries from which to borrow.

Many studies have shown that borrowing always is selective and adapts what is borrowed to the receiving context. The keynote address wants to take this line of reasoning one step further: not only does borrowing operate selectively and adaptively, what appears to be borrowed from other contexts does not even have to exist there. Thus, what appears to be transfer from one national context to the other often really should more adequately be called projection.

Also, the existing research on educational borrowing and lending has mostly studied positive models from which it is attractive to borrow and which serve to legitimate policy agendas. The presentation attempts to show that references to “education elsewhere” can also serve to construct negative models with the function of de-legitimating policy agendas.

The keynote address will explore how PISA top scorers are used as projection screens for conceptions of the “good school” and the “bad school”. It will address why countries are selected as projection screens and which functions projection fulfils in the educational policy-making debate. The presentation will mainly focus on the German case, but will also take some comparative glimpses at Sweden and the United Kingdom. Empirically, it is mainly based on frame analyses of mass media.

Professor Jouni Välijärvi, Finnish Institute for Educational Research, University of Jyväskylä:

International large scale assessments and national education policy

Education policy in most countries aims to guarantee for young people adequate knowledge and skills for decent life in the modern society. International large scale assessments offer many possibilities to analyze equality and equity in education systems worldwide. The most advanced systems manage to bring 95 percent of students to minimum level in reading literacy, mathematics and science at the end of their compulsory studies when in some other systems only less than 20 percent reach the minimum level.

Variation between individual students in their basic skills is also enormous. This means that the readiness of young people for further studies, working life, active citizenship, and lifelong learning in general varies a lot. Learning outcomes are also related to many individual, socio-economic and societal factors. Some correlations are universal in nature (e.g. socio-economic status and cognitive skills), some related to cultural factors. In Finland, for instance, correlations between affective factors (engagement, self-concept, interest etc.) and cognitive outcomes are very high, but in many other countries these factors do not seem to be related at all. In the Finnish education policy importance to focus on pedagogy and well-being of students is resulted from this.

International studies produce important and reliable benchmarks for national policy making, but straightforward conclusions from the results must be made very carefully. In education, policy making should always lean on deep understanding of cultural values and practices. One can always learn from other countries, but never merely copy successfully models from one country to another.

BIOGRAPHIES OF THE KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Florian Waldow is professor of comparative and international education at the Humboldt University, Berlin. Before assuming this post in 2013, he taught and researched at the University of Münster, Germany, and the Universities of Uppsala and Stockholm, Sweden. He took his doctorate at Humboldt University in 2005.

One of Professor Waldow’s major areas of interest is educational “borrowing and lending”. He is particularly interested in the ways in which the “international argument” serves to legitimate and de-legitimate policy agendas, and which role international comparative data such as the data produced by international large-scale-assessments play in these processes.

Another important area of interest is the cultural context of assessment (including its historical aspects) in a comparative perspective. He currently leads a major project financed by the German Research Foundation entitled “Different worlds of meritocracy? Educational assessment and conceptions of justice in Germany, Sweden and England in the age of ‘standards-based reform’”.

Jouni Välijärvi is a professor of education at the University of Jyväskylä, and he has been the director of the Finnish Institute for Educational Research since 1996. He has been working also at the National Board of Education (NBE) during his work career.

Professor Välijärvi has been involved in several national and international research projects on evaluation of learning outcomes, curriculum and teacher education, and published widely in his field. He has been the National Project Manager of the OECD PISA since 1998 and represented Finland in the IEA (International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement) since 1996. He has been a member of expert and evaluation groups e.g. in OECD, EU, Ministry of Education, NBE, and Council of Finnish Municipalities. He is a member of the Board of Finnish Education Evaluation Centre and the chair of Higher Education Evaluation Committee. He has been invited to give keynote lectures and other presentations in several scientific conferences, seminars and workshops in more than 20 countries around the world.

KUPOLIN ja Koulutuksen arviointikeskuksen tutkimusryhmien XII Athena-sarjan luento

KUPOLIN ja Koulutuksen arviointikeskuksen tutkimusryhmien XII Athena-sarjan luento:

To 26.2. klo 10-12 (Siltavuorenpenger 3A, 347)
– Jarkko Hautamäki (Koulutuksen arviointikeskus): “Parents educational background and students’ educational choices”
– Janne Varjo & Mira Kalalahti, KUPOLI: Comments

Tilaisuudet ovat avoimia kaikille aiheesta kiinnostuneille.

*Note: This event is part of the “Assessment and Education Policy” seminar. Talks and related discussions are presented in English on request.

A Seminar on Futures of Comparative Research in Education Politics and Sociology of the Possible

March 2nd, 2015, Athena, Siltavuorenpenger 3A, Auditorio 107

If you wish to participate, please register on the website
https://elomake.helsinki.fi/lomakkeet/57546/lomake.html

Part I: Perspectives on comparative research in education politics Chair: Markku Jahnukainen, University of Helsinki

12:00 Fritjof Sahlström, University of Helsinki: Opening words
12.05 Jaakko Kauko, University of Helsinki: Introduction
12:15 John W. Meyer, University of Stanford: Keynote
12:45 Risto Rinne, University of Turku: Comments
13.00 Nelli Piattoeva, University of Tampere: Comments
13:15 Discussion

13:45 Coffee

Part II: Perspectives on political history and sociology
Chair: Markku Jahnukainen, University of Helsinki

14:10 Janne Varjo, Mira Kalalahti, University of Helsinki: Introduction
14:20 Pauli Kettunen, University of Helsinki: Keynote
15:45 Pertti Alasuutari, University of Tampere: Keynote
15:10 Discussion
15.40 Hannu Simola, University of Helsinki: Concluding remarks

16:15 A toast to the publication of Simola, H. (2015) The Finnish Education Mystery – Historical and sociological essays on schooling in Finland. London: Routledge.

The organisers: Research Unit of Sociology and Politics of Education
(KUPOLI), the Nordic Centre of Excellence “Justice through Education” (JustEd), Institute of Behavioural Sciences (IBS), Department of Teacher Education, Faculty of Behavioural Sciences, University of Helsinki

Brand new book: The Finnish Education Mystery

“From a historical and sociological perspective the Finnish case is not merely a linear success story, but is part of a controversial and paradoxical struggle towards Utopia: towards egalitarian schooling.”

The Finnish Education Mystery: Historical and sociological essays on schooling in Finland

By Hannu Simola

 

Finnish education has been a focus of global interest since its first PISA success in 2001. After years of superficial celebration, astonishment and educational tourism, the focus has recently shifted to what is possibly the most interesting element of this Finnish success story: that Finnish schools have been effectively applying methods that go against the flow of global education policy with no testing, no inspection, no hard evaluation, no detailed national curriculum, no accountability and no hard competition. From a historical and sociological perspective the Finnish case is not merely a linear success story, but is part of a controversial and paradoxical struggle towards Utopia: towards egalitarian schooling.

Bringing together a collection of essays by Hannu Simola and his colleagues, this book analyses the key dimensions of schooling in Finland to provide a critical, analytical and uncompromising picture of the Finnish education system. Going beyond the story of success, the book reveals the complexities of educational change, but also identifies opportunities and alternatives for smart political action in complex and trans-national societies.

Including a selection of key chapters on Finnish education policy and governance, teacher education and classroom cultures, the book will be of interest to researchers, academics and postgraduate students in comparative education, teacher education, educational policy and educational reform.

http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415812580/

 

Lecture 5.11. by Joanna Giota

Open lecture: Consequences of differentiated policies and teaching practices in the Swedish school system
by JustEd visiting fellow Joanna Giota, associate professor, University of Gothenburg
Wednesday, 5th November 2014 at 12:15–14:00
Room: Athena 168 (Siltavuorenpenger 3 A)

The lecture will highlight results from a research review (Giota, 2013) commissioned by the Swedish Research Council of Education in cooperation with The Swedish National Agency for Education. The review aimed to investigate the idea of individualization in the Swedish curricula from 1919 till today and how individualization has been practiced in the Swedish compulsory school during 2000–2010. The results show that individualization is not a simple working method in school, but a view which refers to the idea that school shall be a place for all students and that school shall value and treat every student equally in spite of differences in the students’ knowledge development and achievements. Individualization is also the basic idea of building a democratic society and what school is for. It appears however that difficulties in school are still seen as being caused mainly by student characteristics rather than shortcomings of the school and teaching practices as well as factors at the macro level. Some student groups do not receive equal opportunities to learn and flourish in school and run the risk of becoming socially excluded and marginalized in a here-and-now and future perspective.

Joanna Giota is associate professor in education at the Department of education and special education at the University of Gothenburg. Her main research interests are on children’s and adolescents’ own purposes for going to school and thereby how different types of motivation are related to their learning and achievements over time, self-beliefs and well-being, future study choices, family background and gender. How factors at different levels interact and promote students’ personal growth or lead to social exclusion and marginalization are also of her main interests. Giota’s studies are based on longitudinal and nationally representative data.

Everyone is welcome to attend. No registration required.

Reference: Giota, J., (2013) Individualiserad undervisning i skolan – En Forskningsöversikt [Individualization in school – A research review], Vetenskapsrådets rapportserie 3:2013, Stockholm: Vetenskapsrådet.

Lecture 18.11. by Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre

Open lecture 18 November 2014 at 10−12
University of Helsinki, Siltavuorenpenger 3A, room 302

Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre: Practices for the ‘New’ in the New Post Qualitative Inquiry

The lecture is part of the workshop Encountering Post-Qualitative Inquiry with Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre organized by the doctoral programme SEDUCE and the research centre AGORA for the study of Social Justice & Equality in education.

Abstract of the lecture

What St. Pierre calls conventional humanist qualitative methodology typically begins with methodology and methods of data collection (interviewing and observation) that privilege the humanist Cartesian cogito. However, this methodology is based on a humanist onto-epistemology that is unintelligible in post humanist, new empirical, new material, and post qualitative inquiry in which the human is not a unique, separate individual that exists ahead of the world but is entangled with everything else. St. Pierre argues that beginning with that methodology prevents us from making the ontological turn and doing anything “new”.  She recommends, instead, that we leave qualitative methodology behind and begin with theory(ies) and concept(s) and that enable different “conceptual practices” that may or may not include qualitative methods.  “Practices for the new” St. Pierre recommends for doing this new work are (1) leaving qualitative methodology behind, (2) studying theory, (3) beginning research with theories and concepts instead of methodology, and (4) trusting yourself and getting to work.  In this work, method comes not at the beginning of a study to shut it down before it begins, but at the end, too late, when we think back about what we did and why and what we might have done instead and will try next time.

Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre is Professor in the Educational Theory and Practice Department and Affiliated Professor of both the Interdisciplinary Qualitative Research Program and the Women’s Studies Institute at the University of Georgia, USA. Her work focuses on theories of language and the subject from critical theories and poststructural theories and what she has called post qualitative inquiry or post inquiry —what might come after conventional humanist qualitative research methodology.  She is especially interested in the new empiricisms/new materialisms enabled by the ontological turn.  She has recently edited several issues of journals on this topic:  International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (theme: post qualitative inquiry), Qualitative Inquiry (theme: qualitative data analysis after coding), and Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies (in process, theme: the new empiricisms/new materialisms).

KSP-seminaariluennot 27. & 28.11.

KSP-seminaari 27.–28.11.2014

to 27.11.2014, Minerva K213 (Siltavuorenpenger 5 A)

klo 12.30–13.15
Koulutus investointina tulevaisuuden hyvinvointiin
professori Risto Rinne, Turun yliopisto

klo 13.15–14.00
Koulutussosiologia ja -politiikka: mahdollisen sosiologiaa ja beyond-politiikkaa?
professori Hannu Simola, Helsingin yliopisto

pe 28.11.2014, Minerva K113 (Siltavuorenpenger 5 A)

klo 9.15–10.45
Koulutuksen ohjaus – Näkökulmia ja kehitysnäkymiä
VTT Kari Nyyssölä, opetusneuvos, Opetushallitus

klo 13.15–14.45
Teoria ja metodit tutkija-kehittäjän työvälineenä
KTM Mari Simola

Luennot ovat kaikille avoimia eikä niille tarvitse erikseen ilmoittautua.

 

Athena lectures 6.11. & 4.12.

Athena lectures* -luentosarjassa syksyllä 2014:

To 6.11. klo 10–12 (Siltavuorenpenger 3 A, 347)

  • Hannu Simola, KUPOLI: Dynamics in Educational Family Strategies in Finnish Comprehensive Schooling
  • Sirkku Kupiainen, Koulutuksen arviointikeskus: Kommenttipuheenvuoro

To 4.12. klo 10–12 (Siltavuorenpenger 3 A, 347)

  • Hannu Simola, KUPOLI: Dynamics in Classroom Cultures in Finnish Comprehensive Schooling
  • Mari-Pauliina Vainikainen, Koulutuksen arviointikeskus: Peer group influences on development of motivational attitudes in Finnish primary school

*Note: This event is part of the “Assessment and Education Policy” seminar. Talks and related discussions are presented in English on request.

Tilaisuudet ovat avoimia kaikille aiheesta kiinnostuneille./ Everyone is welcome to attend. No registration required.