1st Edition

Transnational Curriculum Standards and Classroom Practices The New Meaning of Teaching

Edited By Ninni Wahlström, Daniel Sundberg Copyright 2018
    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    Focusing on the meaning of teaching, Transnational Curriculum Standards and Classroom Practices contributes to a deepened understanding of what it means to be a teacher in an institutional context ranked high on the policymakers’ agenda. While the policy literature emphasises efficiency in teaching, educational research demonstrates an awareness of the importance of alternative perspectives on what makes for successful teaching. This book critically examines the conditions and dimensions of teaching as framed in current policy discourse and situates school education in relation to wider societal issues.

    Based on a four-year research project financed by the Swedish Research Council and drawing on international policy discourse, as well as international research, the chapters in this book contribute to the knowledge of relations and influences between international educational reform movements, national curriculum reforms, and implications for teaching and learning practices at the classroom level. Offering results and reflections from comprehensive comparative classroom studies, the book makes a distinctive contribution to our knowledge of the implications of policy for teachers and students.

    This book should be essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students interested in the relationship between the curriculum and teaching in a contemporary context, as well as those engaged in the study of education policy, curriculum theory, pedagogy and educational leadership. It should also be of great interest to policymakers and teachers.

    List of Figures 

    List of Tables 

    Acknowledgements 

    Abbreviations 

    List of Contributors  

    1. Transnational Curriculum Standards, Curriculum Reforms and Classroom Practices – An Introduction (Ninni Wahlström and Daniel Sundberg)  

    2. The Travelling Reform Agenda: The Swedish Case Through the Lens of the OECD (Ninni Wahlström) 

    3. A Theoretical Framework: From Policy to Curriculum and Comparative Classroom Studies (Ninni Wahlström) 

    4. Mapping and Tracing Transnational Curricula in Classrooms—The Mixed Methods Approach (Daniel Sundberg) 

    5. The Recontextualisation of Policy Messages—The Local Authority as a Policy Actor (Gabriella Höstfält; Daniel Sundberg and Ninni Wahlström) 

    6. The Question of Teaching Talk: Targeting Diversity and Participation (Catarina Schmidt and Marianne Skoog) 

    7. The Selection of Content and Knowledge Conceptions in the Teaching of Curriculum Standards in Compulsory Schooling (Carl-Henrik Adolfsson and Daniel Alvunger) 

    8. Curriculum Standardisation—What Does It Mean for Classroom Teaching and Assessment Practices? (Daniel Sundberg)  

    9. From Transnational Curriculum Standards to Classroom Practices: The New Meaning of Teaching (Daniel Sundberg and Ninni Wahlström)

    Biography

    Ninni Wahlström is Professor of Education at Linnaeus University, Sweden. Her current research focuses on transnational and national policy discourses and their implications for national curriculum and classroom teaching from a perspective of critical curriculum theory.

    Daniel Sundberg is Professor of Education at the Linnaeus University, where he is the co-leader of the SITE research group (together with Professor Ninni Wahlström). His main field of research is education reforms, curriculum and teaching, where changes over time and places in what counts as knowledge is central.