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5 - PISA for sale? Creating profitable policy spaces through the OECD’s PISA for Schools

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2022

Christopher Lubienski
Affiliation:
Indiana University
Miri Yemini
Affiliation:
Tel-Aviv University
Claire Maxwell
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
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Summary

Introduction

We find ourselves in a moment where the unprecedented need for, and generation of, performance data in education is drastically reshaping schooling. Alongside demands for increased accountability and transparency in public schooling, these data have produced new urgencies around finding ‘evidence-informed’ (Lingard, 2013, 2021) solutions to putative problems of policy and practice, or, put differently, to identify and implement ‘what works’ (Auld & Morris, 2016; Lewis, 2017a). This desire for solutions has produced a new market for policy populated by new providers of services, with efforts to identify ‘what works’ occurring in tandem with the increased presence of non-governmental organisations in education, both within and beyond the territorial boundaries of the nation-state. As such, powerful transnational private policy networks – which encompass intergovernmental organisations, for-profit businesses, non-profit agencies, and the philanthropic sector – now contribute towards a ‘global education industry’ that exceeds $4 trillion annually (Verger et al, 2016). This has relocated much schooling evidence and expertise from more traditional sources – such as the nationstate, state agencies, academics in universities, and teachers – to the private sector, including providers outside of government, the public sector, or, as is now common, outside of education itself (for example, statistical or technology companies) (Lewis & Holloway, 2019; Holloway, 2020). Such opportunities for private policy networks to produce ‘universal’ forms of evidence and expertise, often with little regard for local contexts, make a compelling case to seek to understand how attempts to reconstitute and govern professional knowledge, learning, and practice are being realised locally (that is, at the teacher, school, and schooling system levels).

Given these recent developments, our chapter focuses on the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD’s) Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) for Schools, an instrument designed to assess individual school performance in reading, mathematics, and science against the national (and subnational) schooling systems measured by the main PISA test. Scores on PISA for Schools are situated on/ against the PISA main scale, meaning that comparisons of PISA performance are made possible between the school and the nation, as well as between the school and other nations across the globe.

Type
Chapter
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The Rise of External Actors in Education
Shifting Boundaries Globally and Locally
, pp. 91 - 112
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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