Classroom Practice and Educational Research
In: Social studies: a periodical for teachers and administrators, Band 81, Heft 6, S. 278-282
ISSN: 2152-405X
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In: Social studies: a periodical for teachers and administrators, Band 81, Heft 6, S. 278-282
ISSN: 2152-405X
World Affairs Online
For many years the EERJ Roundtable has been a standing event within the European Conference on Educational Research (ECER). In a discursive style it addresses issues related to contemporary relationships between educational research and educational policy in Europe. The changing educational landscape, together with shifting practices and discourses of educational research, prompted researchers to discuss the need for increased self-governance. It was taken up as the topic for the 2013 EERJ Roundtable and couched as a question: What is the possibility of a 'moot' for educational research in Europe? This article reports on the 2013 Roundtable. Its three short presentations and subsequent audience discussion have been summarised and reflected upon to make a case for a moot: a self-governing space for educational research. It reveals ECER, and particularly the EERJ Roundtable, as a scholarly and a political arena where the interplay between research, policy and larger patterns of social change can be reviewed, interrogated and appropriated critically into the disciplinary logics of educational research.
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In: Pontoppidan , M , Keilow , M , Dietrichson , J , Solheim , O J , Opheim , V , Gustafson , S & Andersen , S C 2018 , ' Randomised controlled trials in Scandinavian educational research ' , Educational Research , vol. 60 , no. 3 , pp. 311-335 . https://doi.org/10.1080/00131881.2018.1493351
Background: The Scandinavian countries have a long history of implementing social interventions, but the interventions have not been examined using randomised controlled trials until relatively recently compared with countries like the United States and the United Kingdom. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the history of randomised controlled trials in Scandinavian compulsory schools (grades 0–10; pupil ages 6-15). Specifically, we investigate drivers and barriers for randomised controlled trials in educational research and the differences between the three Scandinavian countries Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Methods: To locate relevant trials, we performed a systematic search of four bibliographic databases and a search for grey literature. Results were combined with trials located through direct contact with researchers and government officials. A trial was included if one or more interventions were randomly assigned to groups of students and carried out in a school setting with the primary aim of improving the academic performance of children aged 6-15 in grades 0–10 in Denmark, Norway, or Sweden. We included both conducted and ongoing trials. Publications that seemed relevant were screened based on full-text versions. Data extraction included information from the included studies on grade level, study period, sample size (N), project owner, funding source, and theme. In addition, we conducted two semi-structured interviews by phone or in person with central employees in funding agencies and ministries and 25 correspondences with researchers and policy makers. Findings and conclusion: RCTs in grades 0–10 were few in all of Scandinavia until about 2011, after which there was an increase in all three countries, although at different rates. The largest number of trials has been conducted in Denmark, and the increase is more marked in Denmark and Norway compared with Sweden. International trends towards more impact evaluations and results from international comparisons such as PISA have likely affected the development in all countries, but while many trials in Denmark and Norway are the result of policy initiatives, only one such example in Sweden was identified. We believe the lack of government initiatives to promote RCTs in Sweden is the most likely explanation for the differences across the Scandinavian countries. Funding and coordination from the government are often crucial for the implementation of RCTs and are likely more important in smaller countries such as the Scandinavian ones. Supporting institutions have now been established in all three countries, and we believe that the use of RCTs in Scandinavian educational research is likely to continue. ; Background: The Scandinavian countries have a long history of implementing social interventions, but the interventions have not been examined using randomised controlled trials until relatively recently compared with countries like the United States and the United Kingdom. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the history of randomised controlled trials in Scandinavian compulsory schools (grades 0–10; pupil ages 6-15). Specifically, we investigate drivers and barriers for randomised controlled trials in educational research and the differences between the three Scandinavian countries Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Methods: To locate relevant trials, we performed a systematic search of four bibliographic databases and a search for grey literature. Results were combined with trials located through direct contact with researchers and government officials. A trial was included if one or more interventions were randomly assigned to groups of students and carried out in a school setting with the primary aim of improving the academic performance of children aged 6-15 in grades 0–10 in Denmark, Norway, or Sweden. We included both conducted and ongoing trials. Publications that seemed relevant were screened based on full-text versions. Data extraction included information from the included studies on grade level, study period, sample size (N), project owner, funding source, and theme. In addition, we conducted two semi-structured interviews by phone or in person with central employees in funding agencies and ministries and 25 correspondences with researchers and policy makers. Findings and conclusion: RCTs in grades 0–10 were few in all of Scandinavia until about 2011, after which there was an increase in all three countries, although at different rates. The largest number of trials has been conducted in Denmark, and the increase is more marked in Denmark and Norway compared with Sweden. International trends towards more impact evaluations and results from international comparisons such as PISA have likely affected the development in all countries, but while many trials in Denmark and Norway are the result of policy initiatives, only one such example in Sweden was identified. We believe the lack of government initiatives to promote RCTs in Sweden is the most likely explanation for the differences across the Scandinavian countries. Funding and coordination from the government are often crucial for the implementation of RCTs and are likely more important in smaller countries such as the Scandinavian ones. Supporting institutions have now been established in all three countries, and we believe that the use of RCTs in Scandinavian educational research is likely to continue.
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Working paper
In: The Journal of social, political and economic studies, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 301-311
ISSN: 0278-839X, 0193-5941
A personal account of an ethical double standard evident in responses to educational research pertaining to race & IQ. The existence of a taboo on such research is assserted, & some practical results of the socially sensitive nature of race/IQ research are recounted, focusing on political constraints placed on empirical research (or publication of findings) conducted in the public sphere. Eight specific, personal experiences stemming from this taboo are described. It is suggested that the honesty, ethics, & rigor of researchers whose work supports liberal ideas are subject to less intense, more forgiving scrutiny than are the ethical standards & empirical rigor of researchers whose results throw doubt on liberal assumptions. 4 References. J. Weber.
In: IDS bulletin, Band 15, Heft 4, S. 1-91
ISSN: 0265-5012, 0308-5872
15 Beiträge zu verschiedenen Aspekten erziehungswissenschaftlicher Forschung über und in Entwicklungsländern anläßlich einer internationalen Konferenz von Erziehungswissenschaftlern in Brighton (9.-13. April 1984). Je 1 Beitrag über Sudan (S. 81-85) und Sambia (S. 89-91: Soziale und wirtschaftliche Bedeutung informeller Ausbildung und Beschäftigung in Lusaka)
World Affairs Online
In: Education, Democracy and Development, S. 49-55
In: Bioscience education electronic journal: BEE-j, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 1-3
ISSN: 1479-7860
In: Government information quarterly: an international journal of policies, resources, services, and practices, Band 24, Heft 1, S. 233-234
ISSN: 0740-624X