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Educational Research: Why ‘What Works’ Doesn't Work

✍ Scribed by Marc Depaepe, Frank Simon, Angelo Van Gorp (auth.), Paul Smeyers, Marc Depaepe (eds.)


Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Leaves
195
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Education and educational research, according to the current fashion, are supposed to be concerned with ‘what works’, to the exclusion of all other considerations. All over the world, and particularly in the English-speaking countries, governments look for means of improving ‘student achievement’ as measured by standardized test scores. Although such improvements are often to be welcomed, they do not answer all significant questions about what constitutes good education. Also the research on which they are based is not the only legitimate way to do educational research. Social research, and therefore educational research, cannot ignore the distinctive nature of what it studies: a social activity where questions of meaning and value cannot be eliminated, and where interpretation and judgment play a crucial role.

In this book distinguished philosophers and historians of education from 6 countries focus on the problematical nature of the search for ‘what works’ in educational contexts, in practice as well as in theory. Beginning with specific problems, they move on to more general and theoretical considerations, seeking to go beyond over-simple ideas about cause and effect and the rhetoric of performativity that currently has educational thinking in its grip.

Freedom of inquiry in educational research can no longer be taken for granted. Narrow definitions of what constitutes ‘scientific’ research, funding criteria that enforce particular research methods, and policy decision processes that ignore any research that is not narrowly utilitarian, create a context in many countries that discourages scholarship of a more speculative, exploratory, or critical sort.

This book brings together an exceptional combination of international and cross-disciplinary scholars who bring the perspectives of history and philosophy of science to ask, ‘How did we arrive at this place? and ‘Where is educational research heading? The book illuminates the anti-intellectual consequences of a ‘what works’ mentality in education, and shows that the ostensibly ‘scientific’ revolution in educational research in fact reflects an ahistorical and conceptually muddled understanding of what actually constitutes ‘science.’ This book could not be more timely and important.’

Nicholas C. Burbules, Grayce Wicall Gauthier Professor, University of Illinois

With research increasingly tied to State policies with the instrumental purpose of guiding school reforms, the volume provides an important historical and philosophical questioning of the possibilities, limitations and challenges of education research. Internationally leading scholars engage in a significant conversation that is sophisticated and nuanced for understanding contemporary debates.’

Thomas S. Popkewitz, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA

This publication is realized by the Research Community (FWO-Vlaanderen / Research Foundation Flanders, Belgium) Philosophy and History of the Discipline of Education. Evaluation and Evolution of the Criteria for Educational Reseach.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages I-VI
The ‘Good Practices’ of Jozef Emiel Verheyen – Schoolman and Professor of Education at the Ghent University....Pages 17-36
Ovide Decroly, A Hero of Education....Pages 37-50
Why Generalizability is not Generalizable....Pages 51-64
The New Languages and Old Institutions: Problems of Implementing New School Governance....Pages 65-80
Problematization or Methodology....Pages 81-94
The Relevance of Irrelevant Research; The Irrelevance of Relevant Research....Pages 95-108
Expectations of What Scientific Research could (not) Do....Pages 109-126
Kuhnian Science and Education Research: Analytics of Practice and Training....Pages 127-142
The International and the Excellent in Educational Research....Pages 143-158
Technical Difficulties: The Workings of Practical Judgement....Pages 159-170
The Science of Education – Disciplinary Knowledge on Non-Knowledge/Ignorance?....Pages 171-186
Back Matter....Pages 187-195

✦ Subjects


Higher Education; Philosophy of Education; Education & Society; Educational Policy; Education (general)


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