«Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy». Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies. Volume 5, Number 2 (November 2007), págs. 529 - 562
THE EMPLOYABILITY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN SPAIN: THE MISMATCH BETWEEN EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT, póster de Almudena Moreno Mínguez, Grupo Sociología de la Educación, Congreso FES, Madrid 2013
Study on the origin of the school and the curriculum in the cultural and historical context of ancestral Eastern, Western and American civilizations [4500 b.C] and its relation with the current concept of education.
A proposal for a university curriculum model is presented for the Universidad Autónoma Chapingo
"Libros de texto y control del currículum" Jurjo Torres Santomé (1989).Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1989). "Libros de texto y control del currículum". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 168 (Marzo 1989) págs. 50 - 55.
Los libros de texto acaparan la centralidad del proceso educativo, constituyendo un modo de reproducción de una determinada visión de la sociedad, su historia y de su cultura. También se convierte en un elemento importante de descualificación profesional. Se estudian las características y limitaciones de los libros de texto. Entre éstas destaca el condicionamiento de currícula escolares en las aulas, que condicionan las actividades educativas
que se desarrollan y los procesos y estrategias de enseñanza-aprendizaje.
"Contenidos interdisciplinares y relevantes". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 225...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1994). "Contenidos interdisciplinares y relevantes". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 225 (Mayo) págs. 19 - 24.
Tras criticar la organización fragmentaria de la división del trabajo y del conocimiento y
su traslado al ámbito escolar, se propone un nuevo modelo basado en su relevancia e
interrelación entre contenidos culturales más integrados y vinculados a la realidad cotidiana.
Así, se retoman viejos problemas e ideas que hoy se tratan bajo nuevas formas y
lenguaje.
THE EMPLOYABILITY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN SPAIN: THE MISMATCH BETWEEN EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT, póster de Almudena Moreno Mínguez, Grupo Sociología de la Educación, Congreso FES, Madrid 2013
Study on the origin of the school and the curriculum in the cultural and historical context of ancestral Eastern, Western and American civilizations [4500 b.C] and its relation with the current concept of education.
A proposal for a university curriculum model is presented for the Universidad Autónoma Chapingo
"Libros de texto y control del currículum" Jurjo Torres Santomé (1989).Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1989). "Libros de texto y control del currículum". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 168 (Marzo 1989) págs. 50 - 55.
Los libros de texto acaparan la centralidad del proceso educativo, constituyendo un modo de reproducción de una determinada visión de la sociedad, su historia y de su cultura. También se convierte en un elemento importante de descualificación profesional. Se estudian las características y limitaciones de los libros de texto. Entre éstas destaca el condicionamiento de currícula escolares en las aulas, que condicionan las actividades educativas
que se desarrollan y los procesos y estrategias de enseñanza-aprendizaje.
"Contenidos interdisciplinares y relevantes". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 225...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1994). "Contenidos interdisciplinares y relevantes". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 225 (Mayo) págs. 19 - 24.
Tras criticar la organización fragmentaria de la división del trabajo y del conocimiento y
su traslado al ámbito escolar, se propone un nuevo modelo basado en su relevancia e
interrelación entre contenidos culturales más integrados y vinculados a la realidad cotidiana.
Así, se retoman viejos problemas e ideas que hoy se tratan bajo nuevas formas y
lenguaje.
El curriculum globalizado o integrado y la enseñanza reflexiva. Jurjo Torres ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santómé. "El curriculum globalizado o integrado y la enseñanza reflexiva". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 172 (Julio-Agosto 1989) pp. 8 - 13.
Diagnóstico general sobre la relación de la globalización con el currículum, referido a las raíces y esencias de los proyectos curriculares en diversas áreas de conocimiento, y sobre sus límites y posibilidades. El pensamiento de John Dewey y la psicología piagetiana ponen de manifiesto la importancia de la acción y la experiencia. Se defienden los currícula integrados, como forma de contrarrestrar una enseñanza excesivamente memorística.
Segunda declaración Foro de Sevilla (Febrero de 2014).
"La LOMCE: una amenaza contra la escuela pública"
Ante la entrada en vigor el día 30 de diciembre de la LOMCE, el Foro de Sevilla realiza una Declaración, La LOMCE: una amenaza contra la escuela pública, en la que manifiesta los riesgos que entrañan las normas aprobadas para todo el sistema educativo y, mucho más directamente para la educación pública. Hacen un llamamiento a la ciudadanía para que no se deje arrebatar la educación pública como un bien básico que permita alcanzar mayor igualdad de oportunidades, cohesión social y una sociedad más democrática.
El Foro de Sevilla se constituye como un espacio para el debate y la reflexión con el propósito de aportar a la comunidad educativa puntos de vista, argumentos y análisis de los problemas que afectan al sistema educativo y valorar los planes que se proponen para mejorarlo. En una sociedad en la que los argumentos suplan a las imposiciones y los hechos a las suposiciones. El primer manifiesto del Foro pretendía contribuir al debate de la LOMCE. Ahora el segundo quiere resaltar los riesgos que entrañan las normas aprobadas para todo el sistema educativo y, mucho más directamente para la escuela pública.
La voluntad del Foro a partir de ahora, en esta nueva etapa, es observar y analizar el desarrollo de la ley, realizar un seguimiento crítico de todas las normas de implantación, de repensar y proponer para el debate alternativas que puedan sustituir a esta ley en cuanto se produzca un cambio político que lo permita. Se pretende ofrecer propuestas que tengan un compromiso político, que se apoyen en argumentos fundamentados y que sirvan para desmontar falacias y falsos planteamientos.
"Novas políticas de vigilância e recentralização do poder e controlo em educa...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé, Jurjo (2004)"Novas políticas de vigilância e recentralização do poder e controlo em educação". Currículo sem Fronteiras, vol. 4, Nº. 1 (Janeiro/Junho), págs. 22-34.
Resumo:
Tendo como base a ‘Ley Orgánica de Calidad de la Educación’ em Espanha, o autor analisa como a educação tem sido um perigoso exemplo dos ataques neoliberais aos bens públicos. O autor denuncia ainda como as políticas educativas neoliberais alicerçadas em valores como a competitividade, continuam intencionalmente e evitar um debate amplamente democrático sobre os conteúdos e avaliação escolares, perpetuando uma prática pedagógica multiplicadora de injustiça social. O autor problematiza ainda a febre dos indicadores, como uma das principais armas do projecto neoliberal, para a manutenção de uma escola divorciada de um objectivo verdadeiramente democrático.
Abstract
Utilizing the ‘Ley Orgánica de Calidad de la Educación’ from Spain, the author analyzes how education has been a dangerous example of the neo-liberal attacks to public goods. The author also denounces how neo-liberal educational policies, anchored in values as competition, continue to intentionally avoid a broad democratic debate about content and assessment in education, perpetuating a pedagogical practice that multiplies social injustice. Finally, the author problematizes the indicators’ mania as one of the main weapons of the neo-liberal project in its struggle to maintaining schools divorced from a truly democratic goal.
La cultura escolar. otra construcción del conocimiento (2002). Jurjo Torres S...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Torres Santomé, Jurjo (2002): "La cultura escolar. otra construcción del conocimiento". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 311 (Marzo) págs. 71 - 75.
En contra de la asimilación de las identidades y de un pluralismo superficial, el artículo aboga por una educación multicultural crítica que preste atención y reconozca a los colectivos, grupos y etnias oprimidos, y que reflexione acerca de las causas que generan y mantienen la marginación, la exclusión y la intolerancia.
Yo me esfuerzo, tú debes esforzarte. Y ellos, ¿también se esfuerzan? - Jurjo ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
"Yo me esfuerzo, tú debes esforzarte. Y ellos, ¿también se esfuerzan?"
Jurjo Torres Santómé. Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 361 (Octubre, 2006), págs. 90 - 93.
Todo el mundo se esfuerza cuando entiende que el objetivo vale la pena. El autor denuncia en este artículo la tendencia que asimila esfuerzo a autoritarismo, intolerancia e intransigencia. Y reclama desplazar el foco de atención hacia el profesorado para ayudarlo a motivar a su alumnado y a animarlo con metas y propuestas de trabajo relevantes.
"Sobre los libros de texto. Algunas objeciones". Jurjo Torres Santomé (1995)Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé: "Sobre los libros de texto. Algunas objeciones". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº. 235 (Abril, 1995) págs. 68 - 69.
Objeciones a la utilización de los libros de texto como recurso dominante para promover personas críticas y reflexivas. Se hace referencia a la industria del libro de texto, al control que sobre ella ejerce el poder político y acerca de su lugar como recurso didáctico dominante o como un material más entre otros muchos.
La justicia curricular y la formación del profesorado (2013). Jurjo TorresJurjo Torres Santomé
"La justicia curricular y la formación del profesorado". Jurjo Torres Santomé
Revista Asociación de Enseñantes con Gitanos, nº 30 (2013) págs. 85 - 94.
"El poder y los valores en las aulas. rastreando la perspectiva sociocrítica ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1993). «El poder y los valores en las aulas. Rastreando la perspectiva sociocrítica del currículum». Signos. Teoría y Práctica de la Educación, Nº. 8-9 (Enero-Junio), págs. 28-41.
Desde la década de los sesenta una nueva filosofía curricular comenzó a cobrar fuerza, concepción que hoy en día goza de apoyos considerables en numerosos lugares donde el pensamiento y prácticas de izquierda tiene alguna presencia. Se trata de una filosofía de acción que entiende el currículum como la estrategia para una reconstrucción crítica del conocimiento, para favorecer un verdadero conocimiento de la realidad y capacitar a las alumnas y a los alumnos para intervenir y transformar la realidad en la que participan.
Entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé. Revista de pedagogía vol.34, nº 94 (enero ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé.
Revista de pedagogía. Universidad Central de Venezuela. Vol.34, Nº 94 (enero junio de 2013), págs. 139 - 152
Reformas educativas y neoliberalismo
“Las nuevas políticas y reformas educativas y la construcción de personalidad...Jurjo Torres Santomé
“Las nuevas políticas y reformas educativas y la construcción de personalidades neoliberales desde el sistema educativo”. Jurjo Torres Santomé
Conferencia en el IISUE (Instituto de Investigaciones sobre la Universidad y la Educación) de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), el 2 de Octubre de 2013.
Esquema para análisis de materiales curriculares (Jurjo Torres Santomé, 2017)
Curso impartido en el “Màster Universitari en Investigació en Didàctiques Específiques” en la Facultat de Magisteri de la Universitat de València, como parte del módulo “Bases para la Innovación Docente“. Enero de 2017.
The aim of national macroscopic education is cultivating students’ personal quality and learning ability, but the choice of selecting talents by exam as an alternative standard has aroused the upsurge of "exam-oriented education" from primary school to university. From the perspective of new institutional economics, the traditional teaching concept of "exam-oriented education" is deeply rooted in people’ mind because of the lack of effective property rights incentive system, such as transaction cost, path dependence and signal theory. As a derivative substitute, the exam can reduce the transaction cost, yet on the other hand, from the view of signal theory, it regards "score" as a signal to judge "quality and ability", which leads to asymmetric information and will have a great influence on the training of object of students and receiving objects of society as well as social relations. It’s difficult for talents under exam-oriented education to adapt to the market economy in the disposition ability. This developing method causes the waste of social resources, which is contrary to the training goal. This paper studies and discusses the economic reasons of exam-oriented education from the perspective of new institutional economics, analyzes the necessity of quality-oriented education and puts forward specific methods and strategies.
Descriptive Study on Gender Equity in early Childhood Education in CataloniaMiqui Mel
Descriptive Study on Gender Equity in early Childhood Education in Catalonia
Source: International Journal of Humanities and Social Science
Date: May 2014.
El curriculum globalizado o integrado y la enseñanza reflexiva. Jurjo Torres ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santómé. "El curriculum globalizado o integrado y la enseñanza reflexiva". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 172 (Julio-Agosto 1989) pp. 8 - 13.
Diagnóstico general sobre la relación de la globalización con el currículum, referido a las raíces y esencias de los proyectos curriculares en diversas áreas de conocimiento, y sobre sus límites y posibilidades. El pensamiento de John Dewey y la psicología piagetiana ponen de manifiesto la importancia de la acción y la experiencia. Se defienden los currícula integrados, como forma de contrarrestrar una enseñanza excesivamente memorística.
Segunda declaración Foro de Sevilla (Febrero de 2014).
"La LOMCE: una amenaza contra la escuela pública"
Ante la entrada en vigor el día 30 de diciembre de la LOMCE, el Foro de Sevilla realiza una Declaración, La LOMCE: una amenaza contra la escuela pública, en la que manifiesta los riesgos que entrañan las normas aprobadas para todo el sistema educativo y, mucho más directamente para la educación pública. Hacen un llamamiento a la ciudadanía para que no se deje arrebatar la educación pública como un bien básico que permita alcanzar mayor igualdad de oportunidades, cohesión social y una sociedad más democrática.
El Foro de Sevilla se constituye como un espacio para el debate y la reflexión con el propósito de aportar a la comunidad educativa puntos de vista, argumentos y análisis de los problemas que afectan al sistema educativo y valorar los planes que se proponen para mejorarlo. En una sociedad en la que los argumentos suplan a las imposiciones y los hechos a las suposiciones. El primer manifiesto del Foro pretendía contribuir al debate de la LOMCE. Ahora el segundo quiere resaltar los riesgos que entrañan las normas aprobadas para todo el sistema educativo y, mucho más directamente para la escuela pública.
La voluntad del Foro a partir de ahora, en esta nueva etapa, es observar y analizar el desarrollo de la ley, realizar un seguimiento crítico de todas las normas de implantación, de repensar y proponer para el debate alternativas que puedan sustituir a esta ley en cuanto se produzca un cambio político que lo permita. Se pretende ofrecer propuestas que tengan un compromiso político, que se apoyen en argumentos fundamentados y que sirvan para desmontar falacias y falsos planteamientos.
"Novas políticas de vigilância e recentralização do poder e controlo em educa...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé, Jurjo (2004)"Novas políticas de vigilância e recentralização do poder e controlo em educação". Currículo sem Fronteiras, vol. 4, Nº. 1 (Janeiro/Junho), págs. 22-34.
Resumo:
Tendo como base a ‘Ley Orgánica de Calidad de la Educación’ em Espanha, o autor analisa como a educação tem sido um perigoso exemplo dos ataques neoliberais aos bens públicos. O autor denuncia ainda como as políticas educativas neoliberais alicerçadas em valores como a competitividade, continuam intencionalmente e evitar um debate amplamente democrático sobre os conteúdos e avaliação escolares, perpetuando uma prática pedagógica multiplicadora de injustiça social. O autor problematiza ainda a febre dos indicadores, como uma das principais armas do projecto neoliberal, para a manutenção de uma escola divorciada de um objectivo verdadeiramente democrático.
Abstract
Utilizing the ‘Ley Orgánica de Calidad de la Educación’ from Spain, the author analyzes how education has been a dangerous example of the neo-liberal attacks to public goods. The author also denounces how neo-liberal educational policies, anchored in values as competition, continue to intentionally avoid a broad democratic debate about content and assessment in education, perpetuating a pedagogical practice that multiplies social injustice. Finally, the author problematizes the indicators’ mania as one of the main weapons of the neo-liberal project in its struggle to maintaining schools divorced from a truly democratic goal.
La cultura escolar. otra construcción del conocimiento (2002). Jurjo Torres S...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Torres Santomé, Jurjo (2002): "La cultura escolar. otra construcción del conocimiento". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 311 (Marzo) págs. 71 - 75.
En contra de la asimilación de las identidades y de un pluralismo superficial, el artículo aboga por una educación multicultural crítica que preste atención y reconozca a los colectivos, grupos y etnias oprimidos, y que reflexione acerca de las causas que generan y mantienen la marginación, la exclusión y la intolerancia.
Yo me esfuerzo, tú debes esforzarte. Y ellos, ¿también se esfuerzan? - Jurjo ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
"Yo me esfuerzo, tú debes esforzarte. Y ellos, ¿también se esfuerzan?"
Jurjo Torres Santómé. Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº 361 (Octubre, 2006), págs. 90 - 93.
Todo el mundo se esfuerza cuando entiende que el objetivo vale la pena. El autor denuncia en este artículo la tendencia que asimila esfuerzo a autoritarismo, intolerancia e intransigencia. Y reclama desplazar el foco de atención hacia el profesorado para ayudarlo a motivar a su alumnado y a animarlo con metas y propuestas de trabajo relevantes.
"Sobre los libros de texto. Algunas objeciones". Jurjo Torres Santomé (1995)Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé: "Sobre los libros de texto. Algunas objeciones". Cuadernos de Pedagogía. Nº. 235 (Abril, 1995) págs. 68 - 69.
Objeciones a la utilización de los libros de texto como recurso dominante para promover personas críticas y reflexivas. Se hace referencia a la industria del libro de texto, al control que sobre ella ejerce el poder político y acerca de su lugar como recurso didáctico dominante o como un material más entre otros muchos.
La justicia curricular y la formación del profesorado (2013). Jurjo TorresJurjo Torres Santomé
"La justicia curricular y la formación del profesorado". Jurjo Torres Santomé
Revista Asociación de Enseñantes con Gitanos, nº 30 (2013) págs. 85 - 94.
"El poder y los valores en las aulas. rastreando la perspectiva sociocrítica ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Jurjo Torres Santomé (1993). «El poder y los valores en las aulas. Rastreando la perspectiva sociocrítica del currículum». Signos. Teoría y Práctica de la Educación, Nº. 8-9 (Enero-Junio), págs. 28-41.
Desde la década de los sesenta una nueva filosofía curricular comenzó a cobrar fuerza, concepción que hoy en día goza de apoyos considerables en numerosos lugares donde el pensamiento y prácticas de izquierda tiene alguna presencia. Se trata de una filosofía de acción que entiende el currículum como la estrategia para una reconstrucción crítica del conocimiento, para favorecer un verdadero conocimiento de la realidad y capacitar a las alumnas y a los alumnos para intervenir y transformar la realidad en la que participan.
Entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé. Revista de pedagogía vol.34, nº 94 (enero ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé.
Revista de pedagogía. Universidad Central de Venezuela. Vol.34, Nº 94 (enero junio de 2013), págs. 139 - 152
Reformas educativas y neoliberalismo
“Las nuevas políticas y reformas educativas y la construcción de personalidad...Jurjo Torres Santomé
“Las nuevas políticas y reformas educativas y la construcción de personalidades neoliberales desde el sistema educativo”. Jurjo Torres Santomé
Conferencia en el IISUE (Instituto de Investigaciones sobre la Universidad y la Educación) de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), el 2 de Octubre de 2013.
Esquema para análisis de materiales curriculares (Jurjo Torres Santomé, 2017)
Curso impartido en el “Màster Universitari en Investigació en Didàctiques Específiques” en la Facultat de Magisteri de la Universitat de València, como parte del módulo “Bases para la Innovación Docente“. Enero de 2017.
The aim of national macroscopic education is cultivating students’ personal quality and learning ability, but the choice of selecting talents by exam as an alternative standard has aroused the upsurge of "exam-oriented education" from primary school to university. From the perspective of new institutional economics, the traditional teaching concept of "exam-oriented education" is deeply rooted in people’ mind because of the lack of effective property rights incentive system, such as transaction cost, path dependence and signal theory. As a derivative substitute, the exam can reduce the transaction cost, yet on the other hand, from the view of signal theory, it regards "score" as a signal to judge "quality and ability", which leads to asymmetric information and will have a great influence on the training of object of students and receiving objects of society as well as social relations. It’s difficult for talents under exam-oriented education to adapt to the market economy in the disposition ability. This developing method causes the waste of social resources, which is contrary to the training goal. This paper studies and discusses the economic reasons of exam-oriented education from the perspective of new institutional economics, analyzes the necessity of quality-oriented education and puts forward specific methods and strategies.
Descriptive Study on Gender Equity in early Childhood Education in CataloniaMiqui Mel
Descriptive Study on Gender Equity in early Childhood Education in Catalonia
Source: International Journal of Humanities and Social Science
Date: May 2014.
its all about the content and methods of comparative eduction,
meaning
scope
national system of education
philosophical factor
religious factor
geographical factor
economic factor
By teaching people about public integrity we give them the knowledge, skills and behaviours to fight corrupt practices and establish new behavioural norms and values for society. The OECD’s work on education for public integrity will harness young people's natural desire for fairness and equity. The goal being sustainable cultures of integrity and a better future for all. www.oecd.org/gov/ethics/integrity-education.htm
Discussion on economic aspects of education has acquired great significance in education research during the new millennium earmarked as Knowledge Economy. Education for the Knowledge Economy (EKE) refers to efforts at production of the highly skilled and flexible human capital needed to compete effectively in today’s dynamic global markets. Experiences of last one decade in the IT enabled BPO sector has proved India’s ability to produce and use knowledge as a major factor in economic development and has proved to be critical to India’s comparative advantage. Economists have recognized importance of EKE to develop a workforce that is well-trained and capable of generating knowledge-driven economic growth.
Economics of Education analyzes both what determines or creates education and what impact education has on individuals and the societies and economies in which they live. Historically a great deal of emphasis has been placed on determining outcomes to educational investment and the creation of human capital. The primary mission of the economics of education group is to identify opportunities for improved efficiency, equity, and quality of education and promote effective education reform processes, to enhance knowledge of what drives education outcomes and results; to better understanding how to strengthen the links of education systems with the labour market; and to build and support a network of education economists for education policy planning and evolve structures and mechanisms for implementation.
Educación en tiempos de neoliberalismo: profesoras y profesores como activist...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Una de las claves de la reproducción y consolidación del neoliberalismo, neocolonialismo, patriarcalismo, racismo y de los fundamentalismos está en convencer a cada persona de que solo ella es la responsable de la situación en la que se encuentra; convencer a las víctimas de que son las responsables de su situación (por no haber asumido “la cultura del esfuerzo" individual o por carecer de “talentos” naturales, algo que plasma el proverbio latino “Quod natura non dat Salmantica not praestat”), erosionar y destruir los vínculos colectivos, la preocupación por lo común, tanto sea de fracaso como de éxito.
En esta tarea los sistemas educativos desempeñan un papel fundamental
Un curriculum más justo para otra globalización. Jurjo Torres SantoméJurjo Torres Santomé
Un curriculum más justo para otra globalización. Jurjo Torres Santomé
Cuadernos de Pedagogía, nº 424, junio 2012, págs. 88 - 91
El sistema educativo recibe unas presiones desde el mundo económico que favorecen el sesgo de contenidos culturales y entiende el currículo como un instrumento para conseguir buenos salarios. Es urgente, pues, revisar los contenidos con los que trabaja la institución escolar, abrirse al diálogo y superar los análisis reduccionistas que afianzan el eurocentrismo, el neocolonialismo, el clasismo y el sexismo
"Instituciones Educativas en el Marco de Sociedades Abiertas y Educadoras: La...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Los procesos de globalización afectan también a las instituciones escolares. En la medida en que el mundo se convierte en una aldea global, los espacios con contornos muy marcados, con funciones exclusivas son cada vez más inapropiados. Una palabra tiene en la actualidad un gran potencial explicativo y de acción: redes. Una sociedad red es una estructura social en la que sus instituciones y asociaciones funcionan de un modo flexible para adecuarse a una sociedad con diversos horarios y espacios y ofertas para las mismas tareas; donde ya no es imprescindible estar haciendo siempre lo mismo, con similares recursos, a las mismas horas y días, y en los mismos espacios. En este marco de crisis las sociedades precisan de importantes transformaciones y, por tanto, los sistemas educativos se ven simultáneamente obliga- dos a repensar la misión que deben desempeñar en esta nueva era.
Jurjo Torres Santomé
“Instituciones Educativas en el Marco de Sociedades Abiertas y Educadoras: La Necesidad de Estructuras Flexibles y de Vertebración entre Actividades Escolares y Extraescolares"
Itinerarios Educativos. Nº 4, 2010, págs. 93-104 ISSN 1850-3853, ISSN-e 2362-5554
"Xustiza curricular e sociedades informacionais e do coñecimento" - Jurjo Tor...Jurjo Torres Santomé
A educación é parte dun proxecto político co que as xeracións adultas tratan de pla- nificar e construír o futuro da sociedade e do mundo en xeral. Por conseguinte, calquera reflexión sobre a problemática do que debe ser o traballo nas aulas, a planificación e desenvolve- mento do currículo escolar, obríganos a deternos no significado do coñecemento que se selecciona como obrigatorio para ofrecer ao alumnado e nos porqués da súa elección; algo que esixe previa- mente unha detida análise do grao de actualida- de e funcións que desempeñan os contidos que, ata o momento presente, se veñen considerando como imprescindibles e básicos no currículo escolar a traballar no lugar concreto en que nos atopemos. Neste sentido, é preocupante a rutina con que cada Goberno (e especialmente se se corresponde cun cambio de partido político) fai elaborar novas listaxes de contidos obrigatorios para os distintos niveis do sistema educativo, sen realizar ningún estudo —ou polo menos nunca se fai público— sobre os que substitúe.
"Aportaciones pedagógicas a la educación infantil. Evolución histórica" - Jur...Jurjo Torres Santomé
TORRES SANTOMÉ, Jurjo (1993). "Aportaciones pedagógicas a la educación infantil. Evolución histórica".
En Mª Dolores REQUENA y Borja VÁZQUEZ-DODERO (Coords.): Didáctica de la Educación Infantil. Módulo de Educador Infantil. Madrid. Servicio de publicaciones dfel Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia, págs. 13 - 67.
El mundo del capitalismo cognitiva depende de la instrumentalización del sist...Jurjo Torres Santomé
"El mundo del capitalismo cognitivo depende de la instrumentalización del sistema educativo"
José María Barroso Tristán entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé
Iberoamérica Social. 28 de Junio, 2019
Entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé - TE (CCOO). Nº 365, Marzo-Abril de 2018,...Jurjo Torres Santomé
“La educación laica, democrática e inclusiva para todas y todos es una meta muy distante en este momento”
Celso Currás entrevista a Jurjo Torres Santomé.
TE (Revista Trabajadores de la Enseñanza), CCOO. Nº 365, Marzo-Abril de 2018, págs. 18 - 22.
En Políticas educativas y construcción de personalidades neoliberales y neocolonialistas (Morata, 2017), Jurjo Torres aporta una mirada política muy actual sobre nuestro sistema educativo. Fruto de la preocupación por cómo lo privado disputa el terreno al espacio público, analiza con gran detalle cómo la construcción del nosotros colectivo –que había sido razón principal de la universalización de la educación– está siendo aceleradamente sustituida por un individualismo competitivo y excluyente.
Reseña del libro "Políticas Educativas y construcción de personalidades neoli...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Reseña de Rosa VÁZQUEZ RECIO del libro:
TORRES SANTOMÉ, Jurjo (2017). "Políticas Educativas y construcción de personalidades neoliberales y neocolonialistas". Madrid. Ed. Morata.
"... cada macaco no seu galho". A participação democrática na escola pública....Jurjo Torres Santomé
PATACHO, Pedro e TORRES SANTOMÉ, Jurjo (2017).
"... cada macaco no seu galho". A participação democrática na escola pública. Revista Portuguesa de Educação (RPE). Vol. 30, nº 2, págs. 275 - 304.
Se a educação pública é um projeto político destinado a formar a cidadania democrática, é importante que todas as pessoas implicadas na educação dos alunos e das alunas tenham uma palavra a dizer sobre aquilo que se faz nas escolas e nas aulas e que verdadeiramente estrutura a vida escolar. Deste modo, a participação democrática deve ser constitutiva do quotidiano das escolas.
Os processos de participação devem fazer com que todas as famílias, independentemente das suas origens, se sintam bem nas escolas, sintam que são valorizadas, que têm uma palavra a dizer, que essa palavra conta, é escutada e tem consequências. Dada a desigualdade e as injustiças que atravessam as nossas sociedades, é especialmente importante que isto aconteça com aquelas famílias mais pobres, com menos recursos, pertencentes a grupos historicamente marginalizados e sem poder. Ora, isto implicaria repensar a organização e o funcionamento da escola, com outras relações de poder, potencialmente geradoras de uma outra cultura profissional docente.
Contudo, as dificuldades estão à vista e inscrevem-se nos problemas que enunciámos na introdução deste artigo. Como vimos, as crenças dos docentes sobre as questões da participação democrática nas escolas têm uma estabilidade que é indiferente aos próprios contextos escolares, não obstante a sua diversidade. Entre docentes e famílias predomina a desconfiança recíproca, ora por defesa dos primeiros, ora por receios dos segundos. Os próprios diretores de agrupamento tendem a questionar a relevância da participação formal de outros agentes em órgãos e processos de decisão. Como fazer acontecer uma educação escolar mais justa quando a distância entre a retórica e a prática da participação democrática é tão evidente? E necessário criar, desenvolver e avaliar projetos que encurtem esta distância.
Prólogo. Nuevas posibilidades en la revisión de los discursos educativos. Ju...Jurjo Torres Santomé
"Prólogo. Nuevas posibilidades en la revisión de los discursos educativos". Jurjo Torres Santomé
En Thomas S. POPKEWITZ: Los discursos redentores de las
ciencias de la educación. Morón (Sevilla). M.C.E.P. - Kikiriki Cooperación Educativa. 1998, págs. 9 - 29.
Red pública, red privada: lo que las hace distintas - Jurjo Torres SantoméJurjo Torres Santomé
"Red pública, red privada: lo que las hace distintas"
Jurjo Torres Santomé.
Cuadernos de pedagogia. Nº 469, Juio – Agosto, 2016, págs. 55 – 58.
Educar es parte de esencial en la conformación de un ser humano utópico, que ve la realidad como perfectible, que se siente obligado a ver siempre un mundo de posibilidades, a ser optimista en cuanto a las posibilidades de organizar modelos de sociedad cada vez más justos, inclusivos y democráticos. En este artículo se analizan las diferencias existentes entre roles e intereses propios de las organizaciones públicas y privadas en la formación del profesorado y del alumnado.
«(Previsibles) consecuencias educativas y sociales de la ley orgánica de cal...Jurjo Torres Santomé
«(Previsibles) consecuencias educativas y sociales de la ley orgánica de calidad de la educación»
Jurjo Torres Santomé
En Joaquín Gairín y Montserrat Casas (Coords.): La calidad en educación. Barcelona. Wolters Kluwer, 2003, págs. 253 - 302.
Diseñar un sistema educativo es diseñar el tipo de sociedad que deseamos en el futuro. Los sistemas educativos contribuyen a dotar a las personas de oportunidades para participar en los actuales sistemas productivos; asimismo, ayudan a concretar los posibles modelos de sociedad del futuro. Preocuparse por una mayor democratización, participación y equidad para el futuro, significa construir a partir de hoy unas instituciones escolares que preparen esos pilares de apoyo.
La actual Propuesta de Ley contribuye a dinamitar el Estado de Bienestar. Se echa abajo una de las grandes conquistas del Estado Liberal: el derecho de todos a una educación de calidad y durante el mayor número posible de años (en función de la riqueza disponible en el país). En la medida en que se apuesta por medidas políticas conservadoras como las reducciones de impuestos (en especial para las grandes empresas y fortunas), en esa medida cada familia se verá obligada a hacerse cargo de funciones que hasta el momento le correspondían al Estado. El bombardeo mediático con el que se explican este tipo de medidas tendentes a desmantelar el Estado del Bienestar pretende, asimismo, hacer olvidar a la ciudadanía que la única forma justa de redistribuir la riqueza existente en un país, es prestando más atención a quien menos tiene, no abandonándolo a su suerte.
En nuestro contexto, las políticas educativas que autoritariamente impone el Partido Popular se caracterizan por una gran despreocupación por la enseñanza pública. Su finalidad es convertir el Sistema Educativo en un mercado, donde rija solamente la ley de la oferta y la demanda; aun sabiendo que no todas las personas poseen capacidades, información y recursos económicos para realizar elecciones en temas de educación.
"Mercado y escuela"
Jurjo Torres Santomé
Cuadernos de Pedagogía,
Nº 445, Mayo 2014, págs. 58 – 61.
La fusión de la mentalidad conservadora con la neoliberal produce ataques a la enseñanza pública desde diversos frentes. Se manipulan estadísticas, se desprestigia a los funcionarios públicos, se ataca a los sindicatos y se critica la formación del profesorado. El objetivo último es adiestrar a consumidores no críticos antes que educar a personas imaginativas e inconformistas.
Neoliberalismo y tergiversación de las finalidades de los sistemas educativos...Jurjo Torres Santomé
Neoliberalismo y tergiversación de las finalidades de los sistemas educativos.
Jurjo Torres Santomé (2011)
"Introducción" en: Juan Fernández Sierra (2011). Formar para la economía del conocimiento vs educar para la sociedad del conocimiento. Málaga. Aljibe, págs. 9 – 19.
En el momento presente, la recesión económica mundial que generaron las políticas neoliberales de los países más desarrollados del planeta está siendo manejada como excusa para llevar a cabo importantes transformaciones en las funciones a desempeñar por los sistemas educativos. Es preciso llamar la atención sobre un proceso que viene caracterizando las reformas e intervenciones promovidas por una buena parte de los gobiernos de los países más poderosos del mundo: el de una progresiva economización neoliberal de las políticas educativas, así como de una notable empresarialización de la formación universitaria y de las políticas de Investigación y Desarrollo.
En esta búsqueda de mayor eficiencia de los sistemas educativos, definida y evaluada según el grado de su contribución a unas pretendidas demandas de los sistemas productivos para competir con mayor rentabilidad en un mundo que se proclama globalizado, es decisivo el trabajo de presión de organizaciones como la OCDE, el Banco Mundial, el Fondo Monetario Internacional y la Organización Mundial del Comercio. Instituciones economicistas que, recurriendo a evaluaciones comparativistas en torno a determinadas variables que consideradan claves para medir el éxito y fracaso de los países, vienen funcionando como los auténticos gabinetes diseñadores de las políticas económicas, laborales, educativas, sanitarias y sociales que todos los gobiernos del mundo deben implementar. Políticas que se convierten en obligatorias especialmente para aquellos países que se ven obligados a recurrir a tales instituciones para recabar préstamos económicos.
La educación rural en el marco de la revolución en la estructura de las pob...Jurjo Torres Santomé
"La educación rural en el marco de la revolución en la estructura de las poblaciones de las naciones"
Jurjo Torres Santomé.
Prácticas en Educación Intercultural. Nº 3, Mayo 2011, págs. 7 - 20.
A medida que el siglo XX iba avanzando y las grandes industrias y negocios optaban por instalarse en los núcleos urbanos, con la subsiguiente oferta de puestos de trabajo, los procesos de desplazamiento hacia las ciudades fueron haciéndolas crecer a un fuerte ritmo, como nunca antes se había visto. De esta manera, se acabaron conformando espacios más heterogéneos, donde el contacto entre personas pertenecientes a distintas clases y colectivos sociales posibilitaba una convivencia con mayor proximidad y más facilidades para las interrelaciones.
...
Los nuevos vínculos de ciudadanía tienen que basarse más en compromisos con proyectos de futuro que en el compartir orígenes geográficos y tradiciones del pasado; algo que además es coherente con una ciudadanía democrática que desea y debe decidir sobre su futuro, no esclava de tradiciones que le vinieron impuestas, en la medida en que sólo unas pocas personas tenían derecho y posibilidades de decisión.
Las instituciones escolares son también un espacio privilegiado para imaginar nuevas posibilidades a los pueblos y núcleos rurales. Al igual que intencionalmente se llevó a cabo un proceso de urbanización acelerado, como consecuencia de unos modelos de industrialización y comercialización capitalista, de igual manera existe la posibilidad de reiniciar una nueva reinstalación y repoblamiento de entornos ahora abandonados, pero que con una infraestructura adecuada podrían contribuir a conformar nuevos modelos de convivencia más humanos, mucho más respetuosos con el medio ambiente y económicamente más limitado a las necesidades verdaderamente humanas y no de puro mercantilismo y acumulación al coste que sea.
Apostar por revitalizar un nuevo modelo de vida en núcleos rurales, aprovechando su potencial medioambiental, apostando por otros modelos de economía y de producción precisa, asimismo, de un sistema educativo que haga presente este mundo hasta ahora silenciado o nostálgicamente presentado, con todo su verdadero potencial. Es de este modo como el sistema educativo dejará de preparar fugitivos del mundo rural para educar otra ciudadanía más respetuosa con el medio ambiente y, lógicamente con las demás personas con las que convive. De este modo, las posibilidades de elección que el día de mañana tendrá cada alumna y alumno serán mayores, y sus elecciones las realizará disponiendo de mucha mas información y de mayor rigor en sus análisis.
Selección de contenidos en el currículo básico - Jurjo Torres Santomé, 2005Jurjo Torres Santomé
Selección de Contenidos en el currículo básico.
Jurjo Torres Santomé,
Cuadernos de Pedagogía, nº 348, Julio – Agosto de 2005, págs. 38-41.
El diseño de unos mínimos curriculares debería ir precedido por un diagnóstico fidedigno sobre las necesidades de la ciudadanía en el futuro. Una selección de expertos podría elaborar un breve documento de síntesis, punto de partida para un debate amplio en el que, más allá de reivindicaciones corporativistas, quede espacio para la participación de los diversos agentes sociales.
The presence of different cultures in schools: possibilities of dialogue and ...Jurjo Torres Santomé
The presence of different cultures in schools: possibilities of dialogue and action.
Jurjo Torres Santomé
Pedagogy, Culture & Society. Vol. 4, nº. 1 (1996), pp. 25 - 41
ABSTRACT. This article reflects on schools as spaces for the reconstruction of reality. If the school is an important part of the strategy to prepare for critical solidarity and active democratic citizens in society, it is obvious that it may or may not be successful in so far as the classrooms are converted into a space where this same society can be submitted to revision and criticism and where the necessary skills are developed to perfect and participate in the community. It is not a place to convert the societal groups and cultures without power into extras of the curriculum or additional themes to ease our conscience as happens in many of our classrooms when they develop what I call the “tourist curricula”. On the contrary, an anti-marginal education must revise and reconstruct the knowledge of each group and culture of the world. It is necessary to construct educational practices to teach students to unmask the political, historical and semiotic dynamics that condition their interpretations and expectations and their possibilities for participating in reality.
La educación escolar en las sociedades multiculturales. Jurjo Torres SantoméJurjo Torres Santomé
La educación escolar en las sociedades multiculturales. Jurjo Torres Santomé.
En: J. MARTÍNEZ BONAFÉ (Coord.): Ciudadanía, poder y educación. Barcelona. Graó, 2003, págs. 113 – 132.
Hablar de educación multicultural es sacar a la luz muchos de los conflictos que subyacen en nuestras sociedades vinculados a situaciones que van más allá del propio sistema educativo. Es reconocer explícitamente que no vivimos en un mundo homogéneo ni igualitario, supone subrayar que hay diferentes culturas y que no todas tienen el mismo reconocimiento y poder. Aceptar que se lucha por lograr una mayor justicia social en el reconocimiento de la diversidad obliga a elaborar estrategias que contribuyan a contrarrestar y a eliminar las situaciones estructurales y las condiciones que crean la dominación de unas culturas sobre otras, de determinados colectivos humanos sobre otros etiquetados como diferentes e inferiores.
Plantearse hacer frente a la desigualdad presupone admitir un sistema de injusticia social, y lógicamente de injusticia curricular, en el que ciertos grupos sociales ven más atendidas sus demandas que otros.
Las instituciones escolares son espacios en los que las generaciones más jóvenes entran en contacto con informaciones, adquieren destrezas y valores que los identifican como miembros de una sociedad y cultura; construyen estrategias para interpretar el mundo que les rodea, lo que dará como resultado que las personas que comparten un determinado espacio y participan de las mismas instituciones acaben compartiendo concepciones de la realidad, posibilidades y limitaciones a la hora de intervenir en ella.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
"Performance indicators as a strategy for counter reformist change in educational policy". Jurjo Torres Santomé
1. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational
policy
Jurjo Torres Santomé
University of A Coruña, Spain
Abstract
It is essential, in analyzing the significance of Spain's Organic Law of
Education (2006), as well as its associated measures, to be conscious of
the lines of broad, hegemonic ideology that pervade Spanish society and
the European Union. The market reforms to which the education system is
currently subject leads it to incorporate in an unquestioning way a series
of concepts and models of analysis the consequences of which are a
greater presence of the techniques of measurement and control of
everything that goes on inside the classroom. Standardized performance
indicators are claimed to be purely neutral and technical in nature, yet
they illustrate how new technocratic concepts are intended to manage and
control the education system. The language of standardization adopts an
assumed concern for issues of equality and social justice, whereas
beneath this kind of rhetoric there resides another, utterly different,
philosophy. This ideology in fact believes in a higher degree of control
and hierarchization of the education system which, moreover, gives rise to
a displacement in the decision-making structure. Experts and technical
advisors from the State Educational Administration usurp functions from
schools and effectively reduce the scope for democratic governance in
these.
Introduction
It is clear that schools can, to some extent, be considered as political institutions.
Within a school significant dynamics exist that contribute to the reconstruction,
reproduction and, indeed, to the very existence of inequalities involving race,
2. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
ethnicity, gender, social class, sexuality, disability and religion, all of which are
inherent in society. For this reason governments never lose sight of the educational
system, and hence political parties, trades unions and practically all social
organizations will mobilize, be it through debate or action, whenever a government
legislates in this area.
It is therefore essential, in analyzing the significance of Spain's Ley Orgánica de
Educación (LOE) (the Organic Law of Education), as well as its associated measures,
to be conscious of the lines of broad, hegemonic ideology that pervade Spanish
society and the European Union. On one hand, we find neoliberals who are keen to
drive through measures that favor the interests of multinational corporations; on the
other hand there are the more traditional, conservative ideologies (including those
fostered by the governing bodies of the Catholic Church), which are invested in the
defense and continual reproduction of current social models reflecting classist, sexist,
racist and ageist values. Against such forces we find a conglomeration of ideas
expressed through numerous social movements from the left (socialist, socialdemocratic, feminist, anti-monopolist, anti-racist, ecology movements, etc.), which
are committed, in varying degrees, to the fight for greater levels of social justice, and
to confronting corruption and new forms of poverty and social, economic, political
and cultural marginalization.
Neoliberal positions are those which favor a weakening of the networks that sustain
the welfare state and which center most notably on discourses and practices aimed at
discrediting and domesticating trades unions, deregulating the labor market,
promoting policies designed to privatize the public health system, and securing cuts in
state pension funds, amongst others. In the sphere of education, neoliberalism is
increasingly effective in helping to strengthen private education. At the same time, it
is contributing to the weakening of the public sector. Thus, for example, a raft of
measures have been introduced to increase competition between schools and to
transform the education system into a marketplace (Jurjo Torres Santome, 2001), the
aim being to guarantee all families the freedom to choose their schools, in full
awareness that not everyone has the capability, information or resources to make
informed decisions related to education. Moreover, school performance standards,
530 | P a g e
3. Jurjo Torres Santomé
which involve unjust ranking systems for schools, can lead to a false hierarchy among
teachers.
Conservatives often turn to the education system as a means of securing consolidating
and perpetuating classist, racist, sexist and homophobic structures. Seen from this
point of view, certain aspects of their involvement in educational policy are
particularly noteworthy. For example, attempts to maintain as much control as
possible over what is taught in the classroom were evident in the kind of discourse
emanating from the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport during the
(conservative) Popular Party's years in office, i.e. through the rushed introduction of
legislation over minimum requirements in all areas of compulsory secondary
education and the Baccalaureate.* Any number of justificatory arguments were
advanced for this purpose, all with essentially the same subtext: that in all areas of the
humanities, and especially in history, students exhibited disturbing levels of
ignorance. Obviously, the control of the collective memory which these conservative
ideologues pursue leads them to scrutinize exactly what is taught in order to impose
'their' versions of the truth as the accepted, unquestionable bases for education at this
level.
This imposition of an official, approved body of knowledge is in fact the motivation
behind their desire to elevate the importance of the external assessment of the
education system. In this way, the draft bill for the Ley Orgánica de Calidad de la
Educación, of 2002, (LOCE) (Organic Law of Quality in Education) already made
clear that one of the principles underpinning the legislation was: 'to orient the
education system more openly towards results, since the consolidation of a culture of
hard work and improvements in quality are related to the intensification of the process
of assessing students, teachers, schools and the system as a whole, in such a way that
each of these can contribute to the process of improvement.'
One of the strategies to facilitate this type of control was to be employed through the
formulation of the State System of Educational Indicators, which, according to the
LOCE (December 23rd, 2002), would contribute to the 'orientation of decision
making in education — at both the school-site as well as the administrative level —
towards students and families' (Article 97.1). The National Institute of Assessment
531 | P a g e
4. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
and Quality of the Education System, an organization independent of the Ministry of
Education, would take charge of such evaluation (Article 95). This National Institute
would be responsible for 'the general diagnostic assessment of subjects and study
areas' (Article 96); that is, it would monitor the contents of the compulsory
curriculum, specifically in primary and compulsory secondary education.
The Institute would also be charged with overseeing general testing at the end of
primary education, to 'verify the level of acquisition of basic skills at this level of
education' (Article 17). It was specified that these tests would 'carry no weight in
terms of academic qualifications, but would instead be of an informative and
orientative nature for schools, teachers, families and students. It was precisely this
form of expression — designed to disguise the true intentions of the measures — that
allowed the government of José María Aznar's Popular Party to diffuse potential
student unrest, because in general students did not perceive the true nature of the
reforms.
Curiously, the new Organic Law of Education (LOE), of April 6th, 2006 (as
announced in the Boletín Oficial del Estado), has kept this philosophy practically
intact, the only difference being that political power is now in the hands of the
governing Socialist Workers Party of Spain (PSOE), broadly characterizable as a
social-democratic party interested in achieving greater levels of social justice,
democracy and equality.
In Article 142.1 of the new LOE, external assessment is once again the preferred
option. 'The National Institute of Assessment and Quality of the Education System,
henceforth to be known as the Institute of Assessment, will carry out the assessment
of the education system, together with organizations under the control of education
administrations, which will conduct evaluation in their own areas of competence.'[1]
To effect these objectives, the following article states that the Institute of Assessment,
'in collaboration with education administrations, will develop a State System of
Educational Indicators that will contribute to the better understanding of the education
system and to help orientate decision making within educational institutions and all
other sectors involved in education' (Article 143.3).
532 | P a g e
5. Jurjo Torres Santomé
Hence, this new law maintains the idea that 'these assessments will deal with basic
responsibilities associated with the curriculum in both primary and secondary
education, and will include, in all cases, those responsibilities stated in Articles 21 and
29' (Article 144.1).[2] In order to state clearly the intentions of this diagnostic
assessment — and notwithstanding that Article 144.3 specifies that 'in no case should
the results of these assessments be used for the classification of schools' — three
articles below, it is further stated that 'the Ministry of Education and Science will
periodically publish the conclusions of general interest arrived at by the Institute of
Assessment in collaboration with education administrations, and will make available
public information from the State System of Indicators. Also, it is worth bearing in
mind that Articles 21 and 29 had already made clear that this assessment 'will be of a
formative and orientative nature for the schools and will be of an informative nature
for families and the broader educational community'. How, though, will it be possible
to guarantee that these results are used for 'formative' purposes only, once they are
published?
These measures are entirely new to our educational system, and they will probably
serve to influence all elements of the system, most directly and significantly the work
of teachers in schools.
The Institute of Assessment, which is responsible to the Ministry of Education and
Science, is presented to the public as neutral, free from ideology and, hence, able to
develop ideologically neutral indicators and to test its own performance in an equally
neutral way. However, in reality this neutrality is not guaranteed, and the suspicion
will always remain that the evaluative process will be used by the government in
pursuit of its own political interests. Only in the case of there being a number of
different assessment agencies, all independent of the Ministry, might the rules of the
game be kept even minimally equitable.
Implicit in these forms of diagnostic assessment is a dangerous assumption, one that
will be sought by those within this institution to convince the population that
assessment is an exclusively technical issue, one unrelated to questions of ideology
under debate in society, and one that any professional would carry it out in the same
way; that assessment is merely another bureaucratic task. A similar assumption makes
533 | P a g e
6. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
it possible to convince the public that with these 'neutral' assessment outcomes the
administration is legitimized in effecting adjustments and reforms in the education
system's very structure, transformations that will also be portrayed to the general
public as ideologically impartial, the result of technical checks with no objective other
than to correct imbalances in the current educational model.
Once again, from a conservative and neoliberal viewpoint, this implies equipping the
education system with a business model of operation, legitimizing the transfer of
knowledge and skills which operate in the commercial world to that of the classroom.
The danger here is that the techniques of control typical of the commercial world
would lead to the demise of ideological debate, which forms such an integral
part of education. When the aim is to persuade users of educational services, from
students and their families to teachers, that the only problems that exist in the system
are of a technical nature, questions of ideology, politics, morality and culture, which
have always influenced decision making in education, are rendered invisible to the
majority of citizens. As a consequence, the effectiveness of pedagogical approaches is
characterized as depending exclusively on teachers and students.
The reality, though, is far different because, as Pat Mahony and Ian Hextall (2000,
p.32) note, the form in which indicators are interpreted and exploited in practice
varies according to a variety of factors related to the system itself: who makes
decisions in the Ministry of Education and in the Institute of Assessment; the
assessment model adopted; the groups who figured most strongly in the minds of
those originally designing the assessment instruments; those who subsequently
evaluate findings; and those responsible for the practical implementation of findings,
as well as the context in which any such changes are made.
A good example of how different interests can lead to very different outcomes within
an organization is cited by Ernest House (1998, p.64) in his analysis of the Challenger
space shuttle disaster occurring in January of 1986. The accident originated
seventy-three seconds after take-off from Kennedy Space Center, in one of the rocket
launchers, more specifically in imperfections in the 'O' sealing rings that joined
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7. Jurjo Torres Santomé
different parts of the launchers. During the investigation into the accident, it was
discovered that throughout the development of the project the respective interests of
politicians and technicians had been in clear opposition. The engineers warned NASA
directors of the dangers of launching, but the directors never fully understood the true
risk associated with overheating, and tended to see these technical reports as
exaggerated. Indeed, the directors were far more concerned with the political
consequences of not launching than with the threat of disaster. At each level of the
space agency, the issues of primary concern varied. Whilst the engineers focused on
technical matters, those within the political hierarchy of NASA prioritized questions
of public image as well as the political and economic interests vested in the launch.
A broadly comparable situation occurred in the Spanish State context with the scores
on tests administered by the Ministry's Assessment Agency during the mandate
of Minister of Education Esperanza Aguirre, who sought test scores that would
illustrate the failure of achievement in humanities teaching in compulsory secondary
education. The findings did not in fact reflect the kind of failure sought, yet the
Minister had no scruple in reinterpreting the results with a singular bias, so as to
achieve a consensus amongst political parties in Spain's parliament and thus effect a
profound revision of compulsory secondary education and the Baccalaureate in
accordance with her own interests. Amongst the most deeply hidden interests of the
political right, which the Minister aimed to translate into law, involved finding
justification for setting minimum levels of obligatory knowledge, this in keeping with
the ultra-nationalist vision of the Spanish State held by the Popular Party; it involved
choosing set topics of study which could best be used to arrive at an
interpretation of the past and the present corresponding to the vision and interests
of Spain's political right, in power at that time.
This shifting of indicators and standards, which is promoted as an
indispensable measure for achieving excellence and quality in education, is
particularly forceful when those social movements and discourses orientated
towards equal opportunity are divided or weak. In the field of education, such a
context arose at the time of the Organic Law of the General Organization of the
Education System (LOGSE, 1990), which passed into law during Spain's previous
socialist government, without any kind of accompanying provision for its funding.
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8. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
Over the course of the 1990s, by which time the central government went
conservative, the teaching profession slowly came to understand that the Education
Administration did not seek to effect true educational reforms through these policies,
but to merely to make small changes in terminology and procedural matters, whilst at
the same time imposing numerous new requirements on schools. However, neither
those movements committed to progressive education, nor trades unions, nor indeed
progressive political parties, were capable of mounting a counter-discourse with the
power to bring to light the contradictions at play in the educational sphere. Indeed, the
political right began to achieve its first successes in the promotion of its conservative
ideology with this law, due to changes in its form and terminology. Moreover, the true
significance and the effects of their discourses and measures became more difficult to
perceive.
The LOGSE, together with the official discourses advanced by the Ministry of
Education of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), especially at the time of
the enactment of this law, had already established a discourse based on a
psychological paradigm for analysis and decision-making in the educational sector.
This would only lead to a strengthening of the technocratic approach to educational
policy, whilst abandoning as undesirable more complex analyses of the multiple,
intersecting variables that run through any educational system.
It is worth recalling that as early as the 1980s, conservative ideologies of the most
politically and economically hegemonic European countries had begun to favor a
psychological approach to social analysis, not least in the analysis of educational
systems. The Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) fell under the spell of this
reductionism, and hence when the conservative Popular Party assumed power they
discovered that the ground had already been laid. Consequently, they continued in the
service of psychology, indeed strengthening its areas of influence, in order to avoid
ideologies and the language of the left, given that the natural position of such
psychological approaches allows for the construction of analyses based on individual
dimensions. This is the time of the 'psychologization' of the subject, of culture and of
social problems, which facilitates the implementation of policies of individualization
and - something that the right truly sought - of the concealment, indeed the rendering
invisible, of politics.
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9. Jurjo Torres Santomé
In the 1990s and the years of the new millennium, the rise of neoliberalism has
benefited from the success attained by this reductionism in terms of social analysis,
and has been able to impose the economy as the benchmark against which all
its (mercantile) analysis is measured.
The effects in the educational sector, from its 'psychologization' and the introduction
of a neoliberal ethic, have been the concealment of political discourse and analysis, as
well as the casting of blame on these; a false depoliticization of education. Politics
itself, at least for a very significant sector of the population, not least teachers,
becomes identified with the defense of perverse and selfish interests.
New conservative and neoliberal discourses avail themselves of these economic and
scientific-psychological perspectives so as to impose their own discourses within the
education system. As James P. Gee points out (2005, p.141), discourse in the
educational system works as a grouping of related social practices, 'composed of ways
of speaking, listening (frequently also of reading and writing), of acting, interacting,
valuing and using tools and other objects, in specific surroundings and specific times,
such that a determinate social identity manifests itself and is recognized.' They
generate forms of behavior; they produce, create and limit models of society in which
people are orientated towards living and acting in a way coherent with the essential
philosophy which the discourses represent.
The political right, then, reappears with new concepts, such as free choice,
competition, leadership and more responsibility for school leaders and inspection
bodies, efficiency, and academic excellence; at the same time budget cuts begin
to take on the characteristic mark of the neoliberal State, however much those
directly affected are offered massaged statistics so that they believe the very opposite
of this.
The re-centralization of power and performance indicators
Two words, 'efficiency' and 'excellence', will prove to be key in the discourse which
introduces the policy of centralized assessment. However, both concepts will operate
within the discourse of education as a sacred litany or as magic words, almost like
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10. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
Buddhist or Hindu 'mantras'; they have no specific semantic content, but serve both to
hypnotize and to mask the intentions of the political forces, conservative and
neoliberal, that advance them, words that conceal the obsession for aligning the
education system exclusively with the needs of the world of business-capital, and, at
the same time, an equally urgent obsession for curbing policies of welfare and cutting
economic investment in the education system.
As a consequence, tests designed to measure performance using standard indicators
have, over the last two decades, become the dominant techniques with which the
involvement of political administrations in the education system is measured,
guaranteed and legitimized. Yet they are, fundamentally, being used in an attempt to
redirect the process of decentralization with which modern states try to deal with
internal diversity and the specific needs of those distinct nations and regions within
them. The final years of the twentieth century, it should be recalled, coincided in
Spain with a right-wing central government which, in addition to being of a different
political persuasion than many regional governments, was obsessed with a new recentralization of power, a new process of 're-Spanishization' of the State. This
explains the fact that the arrival of the conservative government in the nineties
brought with it the introduction of these kinds of measures in the education system. In
this sense, the obligatory nature of indicator-based assessment for students
reaching the end of primary education is one of the most significant features of the
LOCE.
Through these politically motivated forms of assessment, the State comes to hold one
of the most efficient means of control over the whole education system, a form of
orientative control which can be employed in the service of the political interests of
whichever party is in power.
Such strategies involving the devolution of powers and the re-centralization of
decision-making have been realized with considerable success. A clear example of
this can be seen in how discussions over the efficiency and quality of schools have
recently become a matter, almost exclusively, of the results of evaluative testing. In
the last few years, an example of this situation is the disquiet caused by reports such
as the PISA (Program for International Student Assessment), designed and applied by
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11. Jurjo Torres Santomé
the OCDE. What receives scarce public attention in current analysis and debate,
however, is the question of who exactly the organizations promoting the language of
diagnosis based on performance indicators represent; what are their motives, and who
belongs to such groups?
The last two decades have seen the invasion of the positivist language of efficiency in
public institutions, and hence in educational institutions: quality, management,
indicators and standards, efficiency, responsibility, profitability, competition, the
marketplace, free choice of schools, privatization, the ranking of schools,
employability, schooling checks, outcomes — all of which are concepts promoted by
the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the ERT (European Round Table
of Industrialists), the International Accounting Standards Foundation (IASC)[3]
(Jurjo Torres, 2006), the OCDE and similar organizations. Such institutions can be
characterized as seeking to accelerate the implantation of exclusively economic
neoliberal models and, hence, as contributing to the weakening of welfare policies. In
short, they are the motors of the commercialization of the education system (Jurjo
Torres, 2001). The emphasis with which governments, particularly conservative ones,
exploit the well-known 'Three E's' ('Economy, Efficiency, Effectiveness') (Christopher
Pollitt, 1993) as a means of promoting their market-orientated policies and reductions
in public spending are quickly coming to infect social services and, thus, education.
Effectiveness is the ability to achieve objectives. It has to do with organizational
capability, with the ability to make decisions and accomplish tasks at the right time. It
is not always synonymous with efficiency. Efficiency is related to productivity; it is
the measurable relationship between results achieved and the resources and methods
employed.
Both dimensions have as their primary aim economic growth. However, practical
experience shows that if indeed economic growth is the necessary condition for a
reduction in inequality and social injustice, such growth in itself does not guarantee
these. We might bear in mind, for example, that these three 'E's', which are
fundamental in the organization of private education, do not necessarily embrace
issues of justice, honesty, equality of opportunity and the quality of resources; neither
do they attend to the inequalities arising from social class, ethnicity, gender, sexuality,
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12. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
language and religion. A school located in a slum area or in an isolated rural setting,
with poor facilities and teachers who are unprepared for the situation and also
possibly demotivated, is not the same as a school in the prosperous district of a large
city, where students tend to come from families which are economically comfortable
and culturally and socially well-positioned, and where schools tend to have good
facilities and highly trained, motivated teaching staff. Clearly, even the most
minimally rigorous assessment must take into account the mass of possible variables
here.
The market reforms to which the education system is currently subject leads it to
incorporate in an unquestioning way a series of concepts and models of analysis the
consequences of which are a greater presence of the techniques of measurement and
control of everything that goes on inside the classroom. The classroom again becomes
the main and indeed the only focus of attention; the quality and effectiveness of what
goes on there becomes the sole responsibility of the teachers and, under the
opportunistic banner of the individualistic society, the students. Other forms of
explanation and causality are silenced, and as a result those within political and
administrative spheres are freed from any responsibility.
Standardized performance indicators are claimed to be purely neutral and technical in
nature, yet they illustrate how new technocratic concepts are intended to manage and
control the education system. They are, equally, a good example of neoliberal policies
in education and, more specifically, of measures aimed at a 'delegation of powers'
(Jurjo Torres, 2001). The State and its obligations fall away in order to allow for a
market in which all responsibilities are located in schools and, consequently, in
teachers. Nevertheless, the State retains strong control over matters which most
concern those in power, especially aspects of the process which influence the
consolidation and continuation of their political project.
Before us, then, is a new concept of education, one typical of the neoliberal political
right; the great inspiring slogans of progressive educational policy, based on the
construction of a more equitable society, with greater degrees of social and
educational equality, are left behind. What is now taken as a working reality is the
existence of a natural inequality, for which society bears no blame; in the same way,
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13. Jurjo Torres Santomé
the State assumes no responsibility in addressing this situation, in redistributing
opportunities. The culture of competition to which this new neoliberal right is
committed evolves in a social landscape beset by difficulties for those who find
themselves least well-placed. We are competing in a kind of obstacle course in which
different competitors face different obstacles, with those schools suffering from
poorer conditions (health, food, culture, care and attention) naturally finding
themselves confronting an unfair and impossible form of competition.
The term 'indicator' has many meanings, depending on the context of its use. The
related term, 'standard', understood exactly as it is used in the literature in English,
takes us into the quasi-military context, in that it establishes a desire for uniformity, in
behavior as much as dress, precisely as hierarchical authority demands. In the world
of business, there exists an explicit need to accommodate production within certain
specific parameters, with the aim of ensuring that the product satisfies consumers,
who effectively verify its validity and (perhaps) its usefulness in the marketplace.
The language of indicators takes us towards ideals of uniformity, penalizing
difference, cleansing away diversity, and thus attacking the very notion of what
should be a democratic society. How is it possible that, during the Cold War, those
countries that represented a capitalist paradise and who criticized the uniformity and
totalitarianism of communist states (it was said that in these countries everyone
dressed in the same way, and that schools taught the same subjects at the same
time...) have now become obsessed with imposing on their entire school population
minimum curricular content and the use of uniform evaluative indicators?
The language of standardization adopts an assumed concern for issues of equality and
social justice, in the sense that it is claimed that it ensures all children receive the
same education, whereas beneath this kind of rhetoric there resides another, utterly
different, philosophy. This ideology in fact believes in a higher degree of control and
hierarchization of the education system which, moreover, gives rise to a displacement
in the decision-making structure. Resolutions about teaching and learning are dictated
from outside educational institutions, without the involvement of teachers, students or
their families. Experts and technical advisors from the State Educational
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14. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
Administration usurp functions from schools and effectively reduce the scope for
democratic governance in these.
The concept of an indicator appears also to have at its base the desire to show that it is
formulated upon a consensus, one which represents ideas and questions of a universal
and impartial character, and of which there is general and complete agreement. It is a
concept which does not easily allow for the appreciation that in fact an indicator
normally represents and legitimizes specific opinions and knowledge of interest only
to certain social groups or professional bodies. Hence, a problem which ought to
occupy the attention of society when indicators are proposed, is: who decides on
them, and why; who will not participate in their definition, and why not; from the
multiplicity of indicators available, which ones are chosen to be obligatory, and for
what reasons?
It is worth bearing in mind that the discourse on indicators habitually avoids issues
such as the conditions in which the work of a school takes place and, especially, the
social background and characteristics of the student body. Perversely, it is assumed
that in current society equal opportunity is already guaranteed and that major forms of
discrimination simply do not exist; thus, what remains of exclusive import is
performance, or, what amounts to the same thing, the fruits of individual effort.
The obsession for diagnosing levels of achievement fails to take into account the
starting point for this process; there is no obligation to ascertain what exactly a
student knows when he or she enters a particular stage of education, nor at the
commencement of those specific years when the student will be subjected to testing,
all of which gives rise to a mode of assessment in which the inherent unfairness is
flagrant.
The predictable effects of performance indicators on students
The language of standardization, the basis of the work of the Institute of Assessment,
is seemingly motivated by a concern for issues of equality and social justice, and with
the aim that all children receive a quality education. Behind this approach, however,
lies a very different philosophy, an ideology that seeks greater control and
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15. Jurjo Torres Santomé
hierachization of the education system. Policies of standardization result in a very
hierarchical power structure, and lead to a strong dualism in the school system, with
some schools tending to get good students and others left with the more problematic
ones, typically from working class families, ethnic minorities or poor immigrant
groups.
Research findings concerning the repercussions in the education system of the
assessment of students based on standardized indicators (Linda M. McNeill, 2000;
Peter Sacks, 1999; Christine Sleeter and Jamy Stillman, 2005; Kathy Swope and
Barbar Miner, 2000) tends to identify the following fourteen collateral effects:
1. The scope and content of the curriculum is reduced. Instead of focusing on their
students' interests when making decisions about course content, teachers tend to favor
those aspects that impact directly on successful performance in the respective
indicators of evaluative testing that they know the State looks at. A policy of
indicators, the majority of the time, serves to trivialize the cultural content of a
school's teaching program. It contributes to the strengthening of 'economically viable'
knowledge, to borrow (in translation) Paulo Freire's term. At the same time it
necessitates casting out half a century's work towards a more directly significant and
'relevant' kind of knowledge offered to the student. Learning comes to be equated with
the mere memorization of discrete bits of information, which is easy to assess through
objective testing. Other forms of learning require more complex evaluative
approaches, and this kind of 'wasted time' is not something to which the market will
respond.
In countries where such measures have been implemented, indicators generally focus
on the most traditional subject areas, this in turn requiring forms of individual study
based on memorization. Other school objectives are thus largely overlooked,
objectives such as the student's socialization; his or her development as a citizen; the
degree to which she or he assumes social and political responsibilities; the student's
level of self-esteem, understanding of, and compassion for, the less fortunate; his or
her degree of ecological awareness; extent of commitment to the fight for freedom
and democracy; development of skills necessary to learn how to learn; amongst
others.
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16. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
The bureaucratic control of the performance of the student body leads to an
impoverishment in the ways that a school works, prioritizing exclusively the
memorization of that information most likely to be of use in answering questions
during testing. We note that indicators, to the extent that they will be subject to a
process of quantification, simply exclude in their formulation important aspects of
learning which are not measurable in this way. We might think, for example, of the
difficulty in using indicators to assess the critical capability of students, or their ability
to appreciate different perspectives during the study of certain cultural phenomena.
Neither can it be said that students' values in a general sense are strengthened through
the kind of teaching in which the yardstick of indicators is ever-present.
With such controls, the task of educating a student to be more creative, independent in
judgment, of sound moral judgment, and committed to a more just, united and
democratic society is relegated to a secondary position.
2. Coursework becomes excessively fragmented, not only the subjects themselves,
which become disjointed, but in terms of study topics, particular classes and
memorization lists. It is a way of putting greater emphasis on the well-known
summary section to be found at the end of each section in many textbooks.
This leads to a simplification of topics and a culture of anecdotally presented
knowledge. Any knowledge that the student brings to the learning experience is no
longer necessary, given that what is to be strengthened is the memorization of
'batteries of information'.
This fragmentation of the curriculum takes students away from a more relevant form
of learning; it does not allow that cultures and interests be contemplated in school
work, and consequently, it is unlikely to stimulate the interest of the student, nor
convince him or her of the need to make an effort in studying.
As a result of the obsession with testing, personal and social knowledge becomes
detached, indeed, divorced, from the kind of knowledge acquired at school; thus, daily
work in the classroom no longer involves ethical and political concerns such as the
language of criticism, reflection on the hidden interests behind the knowledge being
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17. Jurjo Torres Santomé
learned, investigations into the motivating interests underlying the institutions that
surround us, or the professional and interpersonal relationships that we construct.
3. Conflictive aspects of knowledge are avoided in favor of a false consensus.
Standardization reduces the quality and quantity of what might be learned in schools.
There is a tendency to omit topics of current interest from class work, those which
could lead students to question and debate issues of an open, social nature, given that
teachers are aware that these will not be the object of testing.
Instead, the memorization of facts and formulas is preferred, since this will form the
basis of tests. All complex questions will tend to be left out. For example, it would
prove very difficult to evaluate issues surrounding the concept of 'learning to learn.'’
4. Those cultures which have traditionally been ignored in schools become yet
further marginalized. The powerless voices of women, the working classes, people
with physical and mental disabilities, ethnic minorities, nations without a state,
homosexual culture, voices from the third world, youth culture, religious beliefs other
than Catholicism, ecological concerns... It is highly probable that these will all be
especially badly affected when indicators are formulated by governments or
legislative teams of a conservative leaning.
5. Children’s learning is compromised, especially when learners come from
working class, unemployed or impoverished families, or from disenfranchised ethnic
minorities. To the extent that the perspectives of these silenced collectives are not
promoted through the curriculum, we can predict that test designers will be equally
likely to overlook these learners’ needs, and unwilling to invest in the technicalities
involved in developing a more diverse range of tests appropriate for differing social
contexts.
Test contents tend to become trivial, as well, as is also the case with the philosophy
behind curricular projects in the classroom. Thus, school work becomes disconnected
from the local community and from the world of the student.
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18. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
Since the student groups cited above tend to under-perform on such tests, they are
more likely to see themselves as forced to attend public school (given that private
schools are highly selective with student enrollment). This de facto form of
segregation will no doubt lead, in turn, to a false but very widespread deduction: that
teaching in public education is worse than it is in the private sector.
We might even restate here that no neutral, universally valid performance indicators
exist, nor can they exist independently of the surrounding cultural context. Thus, it is
probable that different diagnostic tests will yield different results according to context.
In addition, external exams generate stress and anxiety in many students, and for this
reason alone are not wholly appropriate as instruments of assessment. Moreover, such
nervousness over exams tends to be more prevalent in students from socially
disadvantaged backgrounds, given that they are often accustomed to less stimulating
environments, with fewer adults to encourage intellectual growth and stimulate selfconfidence.
To work with students from disadvantaged backgrounds or from ethnic groups with
no voice or power in society requires teachers with greater training and
resources. Teaching in these schools involves dealing with so much diversity in the
student body that it is simply unfair to believe that test scores and achievement levels
comparable to those from schools with students from more privileged backgrounds
and a higher overall level of acquired culture will ever be attained. Overlooking this
situation leads us to conclude all too easily that the teaching staff in such schools are
worse than, for example, those of elite, private schools where students naturally stand
the greatest chance of obtaining the highest scores in testing.
In the end, schools in marginal or otherwise disadvantaged areas become stigmatized
as inherently bad, whereas in fact all that is reflected in such situations is the
enormous social inequality of opportunity in broader society. The social context
which forms and conditions the life of these schools is overlooked, from the social
class of the student body, their ethnicity, religion, language used at home, the cultural
resources to which they have access and living conditions at home, to the support and
affection received from their families, or their level of self-esteem.
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19. Jurjo Torres Santomé
Hence, the evaluative process leads to a distortion in the perception of individual
students' test results and of the school's overall achievement. These differences are
attributed to questions such as the effectiveness of teaching methods or the effort
made by each student, given that the need to address issues relating to a fair
curriculum, equal opportunity and levels of social justice, do not emerge naturally
from test results.
The imposition of a market model of operation in any field will generally lead to those
with greater resources gaining yet more, rather than effecting a more equitable
redistribution. In education, such a process gives rise to a greater concentration of
better students in schools with more and better quality resources. The consequence is
that society becomes yet less cohesive, with greater social inequality.
6. A return to the most traditional and authoritarian teaching methods is
fostered. The policy of assessment leads to a legitimization of those approaches to
teaching which work best in terms of reinforcing specific information and knowledge,
such as that needed for tests; hence, teaching becomes more traditional, based to a
large extent on the use of memory, the most pertinent and efficient approach given the
context. This in itself can be seen as a retrograde step, a return to authoritarian notions
and, consequently, as a direct attack on more participatory and reflective teaching
methods.
Teachers, rather than choosing to work in the classroom with integrated teaching units
or projects that might allow for the introduction of the most relevant and significant
topics and values for the student, opt instead for lessons that guarantee good
standardized test results.
It even leads one to think that such measures have as their aim the revitalization of
both the positivistic evaluative process, and the failed, indeed, the impossible,
behaviorist model of pedagogy, based on the formulation of operational objectives
and skills. We ought not to forget that if an indicator is going to be quantitatively
expressed, it will demand a formulation that is not only very definite and fixed, but
which, in so being, will bring about a deterioration in what the student needs to
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20. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
study, e.g. the memorization of decontexutalized information bits through lists,
classifications, etc.
The desire to promote a richer kind of learning, focusing on complex cognitive skills
such as reflection, analysis, and the evaluation of information, the ability to work in a
group, to collaborate, to debate, as well as the strengthening of creativity, led in the
past to a relatively strong consensus in the educational sector, including the need to
develop more qualitative forms of assessment, and to find ways of closer, day to day
monitoring of each student. This kind of learning requires a fostering of teaching
methodologies and strategies of assessment that attend not only to coursework as
studied in the classroom, but also to cognitive processes, developmental dimensions,
as well as the social, emotional and moral elements involved in the broader aspects of
teaching, learning and existing in society.
Most teachers are aware of the difficulties involved with assessing school tasks
dealing with open issues. In such cases, an exact match between marks obtained and
real merit or effort is difficult to. This in itself gave rise to the notion of more
qualitative assessment, with valuations such as 'makes adequate progress' and 'needs
to improve.' Without doubt, if more precision in an exam is desired then this can only
be achieved at the cost of setting more specific, closed questions, as in the case of
multiple-choice test formats. Yet, how might the imaginative and creative capacity of
a person be measured with indicators that are susceptible to exact quantification? How
might the ability of a student to explore problems with no single answer or solution be
assessed?
Measurements using indicators require a great deal more precision, hence their
obsession with mathematic objectivity, which itself allows for a hierarchization and
classification of the student body, of teachers, and of schools, although I do not
consider that today anyone can truly believe that in this way one can evaluate what
students are really learning in schools.
There is no longer any sense in talking about the open and flexible curriculum, other
than as a kind of empty marketing slogan. With the introduction of indicators,
discourse on flexibility, autonomy, integration and collaboration comes to an end.
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21. Jurjo Torres Santomé
These concepts disappear or are rendered vacuous, their true meaning lost, as are the
philosophies that motivated them and made them attractive and inspiring concepts.
7. The use of the most standardized text books is reinforced, especially those
books oriented toward test topics. In addition, a greater degree of external control over
class work is exercised by the Administration and its business 'partners' who are
slowly monopolizing 'school learning' and 'official learning.'
It is predictable that as a consequence of the culture of testing, a new kind of textbook
will emerge, one of great value to the student: books with tricks or indeed with
answers to help pass tests, in the same way that books exist to help pass the kind of
personality tests used by many companies, and books to assist those wishing to pass
the driving test. [4]
8. The main concerns of teachers will again become those of discipline and the
culture of effort. When coursework and learning tasks are less significant or relevant
to students, they become bored and are more easily distracted, which one might
imagine will lead to an increase in disruptive behavior and, as a response, to a
hardening of discipline in schools. Given that the emphasis, for both teachers and
students, will be to focus all matters on guaranteeing good results in standardized
tests, concern over quality in teaching and learning strategies will be relegated to a
secondary plain because the overriding goal will be to keep overall school
performance scores high on the diagnostic assessment scales.
Such measures are also the surest way of promoting in the student body a credit-based
culture. Marks and certificates become the only end to education and to the
educational system itself. What matters is to obtain a diploma.
Equally, one can predict that teachers who teach those age groups in which testing
takes place will feel a notable unease, tension and anxiety, given that their colleagues,
as well as students' families, will see them as responsible for their children's
achievement. It is no surprise that in schools the where the two age groups
undergoing testing are enrolled, the teaching staff are often the least experienced,
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22. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
whilst those with seniority prefer to work with age groups whose achievement is not
so closely scrutinized by the wider academic community.
The effectiveness and quality of teacher work is conceptualized, defined and
evaluated by the Institution of Assessment; the efficient teacher will be he or she
whose students score well on tests.
9. Teachers' freedom is limited, leading to a prescriptivism and centralization in
decisions over coursework, with the subsequent effect of the de-professionalization
of teachers. There is an imbalance in decision-making when resolutions about
teaching and learning are dictated from outside educational institutions, without the
involvement of teachers, students or their families. Groups of technical experts from
the Administration are usurping power from schools, thus limiting the democratic
governance of the same, and replacing it with purely bureaucratic management.
The discourses and practices promoted through curricular policy based on quality
standards very seldom respect the autonomy of teachers. If we accept that every class
of students, and indeed every individual student, have inherent idiosyncrasies, and
that what is fitting and conducive to learning in one classroom might not be so in
another (given the specific history and context of that class), then we must also
recognize that the rigid development of educational goals and, consequently, of the
methodological strategies that underpin performance-indicator policies, do not render
such lines of educational policy easily defensible. Success at school requires
strong teacher autonomy, so that they can adapt to the conditions in which they work
and respect the interests of those people in their classrooms.
It is essential that strategies promoted and used to improve quality in educational
systems should respect the need for autonomy amongst teachers, in the same way that
at the university level, freedom of thought in both the professor and the student are
essential requirements.
However, techniques employed in the process of deriving indicators place excessive
blame on teachers by effectively laying at their feet all responsibility for identifiable
deficiencies of students in their charge; in this way the very teachers themselves are
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disciplined and required to adopt certain forms of behavior in the classroom, to use
more authoritarian, didactic approaches, and to concentrate exclusively on those areas
of the curriculum that the State is bound to oversee and which are coherent with what
we might call 'official learning.' If we suppose that in every field of knowledge there
are many open topics, with conflicting perspectives, the definition of indicators and
the tests designed to measure them can very easily serve to impose on schools an
official form of thinking, that echoes perspectives that the State labels as valid and
correct. We are facing a new attempt to impose an official culture, an interpretation of
history and of humanity's present state in accordance with the interests of the most
conservative ideologies. We ought not forget that during the mandate in Spain of the
Popular Party, in an attempt to reinterpret certain periods in of our recent past and to
continue undermining the claims of the respective historic nationalities — especially
those supported by nationalist parties in some of Spain's regions — a media
bombardment was first employed to convince society of the presumed failure of
Humanities teaching in secondary education, after which new compulsory subjects
were imposed, with not the least debate or even token moves towards consensus with
groups or social movements, other than those directly affiliated to the Popular Party.
10. There are those who defend the policy of standards as a means of
'stimulating' bad teachers. It is claimed that good teachers are unaffected by testing,
whereas the findings of numerous studies in other countries make it clear that even the
best and most experienced teachers find themselves forced to adapt to the use of
certain coursework and methodologies that accord with forms of assessment. Such
policies, then, oblige all teachers to opt for artificially simplified curricula. Of sole
import is that which counts on tests.
We are seeing a clear return to the discourse of competition and hierarchization
characteristic of models of capitalism which had, in the last few decades, been
replaced, at least in terms of the prevailing discourse, by notions more strongly
focused on collaboration, solidarity, democracy and social justice. When analyzed
more deeply, this also implies a return to authoritarianism and to forms of
structuralization involving social class, sexism, racism, homophobia and religion, all
of which are taken as natural processes in social organization. It is highly likely that
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competition between and within schools will become the basis for survival strategies
and for obtaining funding from the Administration.
11. Relations between teachers and the Administration will always involve
suspicion, even fear. The Administration appears as coercive, threatening and
sanctioning, hence becoming something to hide from, and from which problems are
concealed. Its bureaucratic and impersonal dimensions are thus compounded.
It is also worth bearing in mind that the policy of using indicators is, moreover, a
reflection more generally of policies based on distrust in, and suspicion of, teachers,
whose assessments of students are by extension considered to be unreliable. The use
of standard indicators might even prove attractive to otherwise progressive teachers,
as a means of monitoring assessment practices in the regulated private sector (which
is partially state-funded) — i.e. religious schools, teaching cooperatives, and other
forms of non-state establishments — a sector which tends to be more 'generous' with
final evaluations and grades than the public sector.
12. Standardized test results contribute to the construction of a ranking system
for schools. Such rankings, it is easy to imagine, can circulate freely in the mass
media, not unlike the rankings of restaurants from the Michelin Guide. What will not
be forthcoming from the public administrations, however, is a debate that might put
into question the kind of classification based on such standards. The general populous,
as well as a certain percentage of teachers, are unlikely to realize that whereas these
rankings are derived from test results which include some clearly important
indicators, the absence of other equally important indicators (which would lead to a
very different hierarchization) is never debated or discussed.
The school-ranking process ends up creating excessive anxiety in teachers, who are all
too aware that schools obtaining low test scores quickly acquire negative labels. This
anxiety in itself would imply that the schools and staff are not receiving adequate
support from the Administration. In fact, if social pressure for good test scores is
strong enough, a possible consequence is that teachers might find themselves falling
into traps such as screening and enrolling only those students who are most likely to
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25. Jurjo Torres Santomé
perform well on the tests: a practice known as 'cherry-picking' or selecting 'the cream
of the crop'.
If issues of class, ethnic origin, religion, gender and family background are
overlooked when a school seeks to obtain respectable test scores, then those groups of
students coming from socially disadvantaged and marginalized communities will
become a burden to be off-loaded; such students risk being seen by schools as a
serious threat to the highly guarded public image of the school, and it is entirely
possible that socially pernicious strategies surface here, such as enacting legal
loopholes that bar potentially low-scoring students from enrolling in a school.
It is important to bear in mind that the results of evaluative testing do not reflect the
success or failure of a school, but instead merely whether students answered certain
questions correctly or not. They do not tell us whether if these students have been
wasting their time or learning a great deal. Real success or failure in any educational
project involves considering the starting-point, that is, what students knew at the
beginning of the period under assessment.
A good example of the political use of indicators is that of assessment carried out in
May of 2005 on sixth-year students of primary education in the regional
administration of Madrid, governed by the Popular Party and presided over by
Esperanza Aguirre, former State Minister of Education and Science. Through the
application of tests seemingly designed to objectively evaluate those performance
indicators in the areas of mathematics and language, one of the most aggressive and
unjust attacks on public education, students and pubic-school teachers was launched.
What is more, some test items were lacking in rigor and there was no democratic
transparency in the design process. They were, moreover, applied to all schools, with
no concern for clearly conditioning variables such as school context; availability of
instructional and other resources; the range of teachers and other professionals
employed; the profile of the student body; the integration policies developed by
each institution; or the class, gender, ethnicity, countries, cultures, languages and
religions most representative of each school under assessment. That is, equal
treatment was given to that which was truly unequal and it was concluded,
erroneously, that the best schools and students came from the private sector. It was
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26. Performance indicators as a strategy for counter-reformist change in educational policy
made public that of Madrid's top hundred schools, according to these tests, only
twenty were public; in other words, that the system of public education was bad, the
kind of assertion that neither the World Bank, nor the International Monetary Fund to cite two international institutions most supportive of the private sector - would
make without qualification.
Having made public these findings, Madrid's education administration made no
announcement as to how it planned to support low-performing schools in order to
rectify the shortfalls detected within them.
13. The cost and bureaucratic weight of the education system rise. The move
towards diagnostic assessment through testing, and towards measuring achievement
against official indicators, serves to increase levels of bureaucracy in the system. In
order to test students at the programmed levels: at the end of the fourth year of
primary education and the second year of secondary education, the deployment
of a considerable number of evaluators is required; in addition, a great number of
people are needed — not to mention the accompanying infrastructure — in order to:
design and print the tests; to mark the tests speedily; to analyze the resulting data;
interpret them; and to edit, publish and disseminate the findings. No doubt a whole
new business will emerge around the administration of these tests. Indeed, simply
printing such a large number of exams represents a solid business opportunity for the
appointed company. To administer and correct the tests will also generate a certain
amount of employment, so much that technological solutions to some of the
computational and statistical work will likely be sought. Did the Ministry of
Education and Science calculate the cost of this new form of bureaucracy together
with the cost of contracting the bureaucrats necessary to administer it?
14. Positivism becomes more entrenched as the only valid epistemology in
education. We find before us a form of mass diagnostic assessment, based on
answering numerous test questions in a limited period of time and where test
conditions carry with them a certain degree of tension for students, given that teachers
have probably communicated that the school's future is to some extent in play with
every answer. Such a scenario involves something akin to Behaviorist models of
stimulus- response. Other cognitive approaches are ignored, rendered unacceptable or
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27. Jurjo Torres Santomé
invalid, approaches which focus on more qualitative and continuous modes of
monitoring and confirming the state of learning. We have not, for example, mentioned
Piagetian and Neo-Piagetian clinical methods of unraveling the truth about what
children really know and understand, an approach that revolutionized the world of
psychology. Currently, other developments in cognitive psychology, such as Howard
Gardner's theory on multiple intelligences (Howard Gardner 2003) would also
disregard as useless the testing approach to assessment.
The introduction of forms of diagnostic assessment under discussion here, then, goes
against the general recommendations not only of pedagogy, but also of psychology, as
well as the very educational administrations themselves, who for some time have
promoted the need for on-going assessment. What receives official support now,
however, is a system of final exams, in which the student effectively gambles nine
months' learning in a couple of hours. It is something which in theory no-one defends
yet that the most progressive and committed teachers put into practice every day. We
all know the sensation of having had 'a bad day'; all of us, that is, except the
Administration in its choice of an evaluative system of such a positivist nature.
A political re-reading of the consequences of indicators
The discourse based on school autonomy advanced by neoliberal education
administrations in fact conceals authoritarian measures of control and monitoring of
schools, such as minimum compulsory learning topics in each discipline and level
(which in reality means ‘maximum’ topics, as any practicing teacher knows from
experience), as well as the extensive list of indicators used in external assessment.
The philosophy of procuring a greater involvement of teachers, granting them more
autonomy and offering them better training and a more appropriate range of support
for keeping their knowledge current, whether scientific or pedagogical, all crumbles in
face of a government that opts for a culture of suspicion and, hence, the reinforcement
of surveillance measures and authoritarian control over what happens in the
classroom; a culture which aims at limiting the range and scope of work topics
through standardized testing. The most free and open elements on the curriculum
disappear, so that wholly closed and rigid ones can be developed. It is, in addition, an
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approach that tries to bury from sight more constructivist models and to substitute
these with others of a more behaviorist orientation.
In this way a notable and yet invisible re-centralization of power is produced, which
effects as much teachers as students and their families, and this even though the
official discourse ostensibly promotes decentralization. In the end, the resulting
phenomenon is one of an internalization of that control, which forces teachers to selfregulate in order to achieve exactly what is dictated by the controlling
governmental agency, the National Institute of Assessment. Despite having made
both teachers and wider society believe that schools and individual teachers enjoy
complete freedom, those working in the education sector have their hands tied as
never before.
The assessment process itself, which the Ministry claims will help to inform and
orientate families, turns into a foreboding mechanism that exerts pressure and control
over the work carried out in the classroom. Imagine how, each time international
comparative studies on education are made public, a significant avalanche of criticism
directed at teachers follows. Very rarely is this criticism aimed at educational
Administrations. These bodies turn to such studies whenever they seek to initiate
some kind of reform, but with their own ends in mind, in the process manipulating the
way the data are interpreted, and never questioning the way in which the findings
were arrived at.
It is particularly noteworthy that we are not in the least accustomed to seeing
criticisms of these comparative studies themselves: their form, their content, how they
were conducted, and which criteria were used to compare the cultural level of
students. Neither are we used to reading any analyses aimed at clarifying whether the
findings are genuinely significant; few doubts are raised as to whether what is in fact
being assessed can be done adequately with the kinds of tests used. This critical void
creates the feeling that there is a national and international consensus about the
relevance of what should be assessed, the strategies to be employed in the formulation
of diagnostic conclusions, and indeed in the choice of illustrative examples from
studies. This is not even to mention the atmosphere in which testing is carried out.
Thus, for example, Margaret Brown (2001, p. 63) discusses forms of comparing
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29. Jurjo Torres Santomé
students from different countries, citing the case of a school in Korea where the
necessity of presenting their country in a positive light led students to be highly
conscious of the need to make a great effort: 'students taking the tests marched to the
sounds of the school band and were pressurized to do all that they could for their
country.' On the other hand, in a North American school students were informed that
the test scores would not count towards their cumulative grades and, that if they found
any item especially difficult, they should move on to the next. Such a case highlights
the probability that student motivation will affect the results obtained in testing. It is
even probable that, at a given moment, those students most annoyed or upset by
teachers might seek vengeance by deliberately performing poorly and thus placing
their teachers in an unfavorable light.
We can affirm that, since the decade of the nineties, school policy has been inundated
with vocabulary such as effectiveness, quality, performance and excellence. However,
these terms are understood in a commercial sense, that is, jettisoning any analysis of
the social context and the sociocultural characteristics of the families who send their
children to a particular institution. Nowadays differences, as much between schools
and teachers as between students, are understood solely in terms of degree of personal
effort. Concern for social inequality, for social, political, cultural and economic
injustice have been put aside, and as a result, understanding difference is reduced to
its very minimum expression: as the result of personal effort.
This de-ideologization clearly pushes any concern for course content, skills and the
kind of values that schools should promote outside public debate. It is, indeed, as if
these issues were no longer considered problematic, as if they could be resolved by a
decision that any specialist might make and upon which there is universal agreement;
that is, the conflicts that form part of the production and diffusion of knowledge have
been eliminated, as have those naturally competing perspectives and explanations of a
given phenomenon which lead to a corresponding number of possible solutions. The
ideology of a false consensus accompanies everything.
Teaching is thus reduced to a technical procedure, and its conceptualization as work
of an intellectual, moral and political nature disappears. It is assumed that inequalities
can be managed within the school walls, and solutions sought therein. In this way,
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individualist ideologies that are typical of current neoliberal and conservative
societies, make each student uniquely responsible for his or her own success or
failure. As a result, prevailing education policy stands exonerated from responsibility.
The notion of indicators cannot be understood in isolation from other decisive
questions, such as the treatment of diversity in the classroom and educational justice.
Equally, it might be suggested that to the extent that uniform indicators are
established across the entire Spanish State, the risk is run that we forget that our
current reality is pluri-national, multi-cultural and multi-linguistic, a risk which brings
with it the enforcement of greater uniformity, defined from the position of a
traditionalist centralism obsessed with the recovery of the ghost of a Great, United
Spain.
Any debate on performance indicators and the evaluation of indicators in the
education system should involve the kind of moral, ethical and political
questions that are intrinsic to educational policy.
In any case, if the State imposes standards for different subjects and at different
stages, it would be logical that it should also dictate standards regarding
exactly which teaching resources all schools should have access to (library and
classroom libraries, audiovisual materials, laboratories, computers, software, maps);
the number of teachers deemed necessary and the special subject areas with which
they should be associated; as well as other specialists within the school
(administrative personnel and IT specialists, for example); and the quality of furniture,
sports facilities, heating and cooling systems, interior decoration and design,
necessary space and cafeteria, amongst others). In establishing such measures,
consideration of the economic, cultural and social conditions of the school location is
also necessary, so that additional incentives are provided for those schools receiving
students from socially marginal backgrounds or with special needs. Some sort of
incentive should be offered in the case of schools located in socially deprived areas,
so as to attract the best possible teachers.
The policy of implementing performance standards is one further step towards the reestablishment of social engineering models that exert control over all matters
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31. Jurjo Torres Santomé
relating to citizens. These models had been in crisis throughout the seventies and
eighties because the social sciences had promoted more hermeneutic and qualitative
models, as well as the need to attend to the political and ethical dimensions of
knowledge. Even nowadays, numerous studies have shown that the more positivistic
concepts and methodologies have a great many points of weakness.
In contrast to the procedural principles laid out by Lawrence Stenhouse (1984), which
focus on the processes of learning, the formulation of standards is concerned with the
measurement of end products, and not with orientating teaching and learning in the
classroom. A democratic education policy ought to propose procedural approaches
which serve to stimulate debate over school issues in both teaching institutions and at
the heart of society itself; it should directly facilitate making those decisions which
best improve the quality of both the resources and processes of teaching and learning.
It is therefore advisable that evaluative policies based on standards be closely
monitored, since these can easily lead to processes of indoctrination, with tests that
contain certain themes and topics while omitting others, tests which students must
answer in specific ways and according to specific interpretations.
With educational policy based on such measures, then, we are witness to a model of
State Panopticon or State Assessor, which aims at the maximum management and
control of the education system in ways that are coherent with the market policies of
neoliberalism. Nonetheless, this dismemberment of the public sphere will come across
as perfectly legitimate public action. Obsessed with the product while ignoring
processes and contexts, this situation will always favor the private sector because, in
private education, sufficient human and economic resources are generally available
for whatever is necessary.
Indicators and standards operate as a strategy for securing whatever the prevailing
ministerial bureaucracy decides at a given moment. The discourse of professionalism
is thus rendered little more than a slogan. Consequently, the role of the teacher
becomes comparable to that of an efficient worker, following the orders of others, and
doing so in a way which is clearly laid out. Professional autonomy is merely a phrase
for use in public relations and as a means of attaining the consent of teachers, creating
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in them the belief that they hold genuine decision-making power when in reality their
hands are ever more securely tied.
In summary, at the present moment we cannot decontextualize the plan to formulate
indicators from the framework in which they derive their legitimacy. Through the
LOCE, the Popular Party hoped to bring about an educational counter-reform aimed at
restoring power to the most conservative cultural and ideological groups, as well as
safeguarding the interests of sectors supportive of neoliberalism.
Now, with the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) in office, the aim ought to be
very much the contrary, to contribute to democratizing far more fully the education
system and to implementing policies of greater educational and curricular equity and
justice.
Notes
* This is a post-compulsory, two-year college-preparation program offered within
secondary education (corresponding to ages 16-18).
[1] Spain is a state composed of seventeen "autonomous communities" or regions,
each one of which has its own competences in education. Hence, administrations with
responsibilities for education in Spain include both the central State (the Ministry of
Education) and each region's own department of education.
[2] Article 21: 'General diagnostic assessment. At the end of the second cycle of
primary education all schools will undertake a diagnostic assessment of the basic
skills acquired by students. This assessment, the responsibility of education
administrations, will be of a formative and orientative nature for schools and an
informative nature for families and the broader educational community'. It is a test
taken by all students at ten years of age, in addition to those who have been required
to repeat a year (144.1). Article 29: 'General diagnostic assessment. At the end of the
second cycle of secondary education all schools will undertake a diagnostic
assessment of the basic skills acquired
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33. Jurjo Torres Santomé
by students. This assessment, the responsibility of education administrations, will be
of a formative and orientative nature for schools and an informative nature for
families and the broader educational community'. It is a test taken by all students at
fourteen years of age, in addition to those who have been required to repeat a year.
[3] http://www.iasb.org
[4] Not to mention the growing number of databases on web sites frequently visited
by students seeking thematically listed academic term papers and answers to exam
questions.
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