Comprehensive frameworks of school learning in ILSAs

Link:
Autor/in:
Beteiligte Personen:
  • Nilsen, Trude
  • Stancel-Piatak, Agnes
  • Gustafsson, Jan-Eric
Verlag/Körperschaft:
Springer International Publishing AG
Erscheinungsjahr:
2022
Medientyp:
Text
Schlagworte:
  • Development of ILSA
  • Comprehensive Theoretical Frameworks
  • Effectivenes of Education Systems
Beschreibung:
  • The major aim of International Large-Scale Assessments (ILSAs) of school systems is to collect comprehensive information about factors related to learning, teaching, and student outcomes from various education systems in order to identify possible factors and areas for improvements on different levels and with different perspectives. Although ILSAs differ in their specific research and policy focus, the overall study designs rely on a common understanding of the structure and processes within education systems. Learning in schools is perceived as being embedded into the context of (a) the local school with its different actors, facilities, and regulations, and (b) the national or regional context. More recently, due to continuous globalization, school systems are increasingly perceived, analyzed, and described in a global perspective. The development of respective theoretical foundations describing students’ learning within the school system can be tracked back to the 1960s when the idea of opportunity to learn developed. Recent extensions are based upon the input-process-and-output models and draw from economic and system theories. They provide a comprehensive and elaborated framework describing learning as a dynamic process within the school system. The main aim of this chapter is to first review the most prominent frameworks of school learning. Next, ILSAs are reviewed with respect to the extent they draw implicitly or explicitly on these frameworks. Finally, possibilities for further developments are discussed. The structure of the chapter follows these aims.
  • The major aim of International Large-Scale Assessments (ILSAs) of school systems is to collect comprehensive information about factors related to learning, teaching, and student outcomes from various education systems in order to identify possible factors and areas for improvements on different levels and with different perspectives. Although ILSAs differ in their specific research and policy focus, the overall study designs rely on a common understanding of the structure and processes within education systems. Learning in schools is perceived as being embedded into the context of (a) the local school with its different actors, facilities, and regulations, and (b) the national or regional context. More recently, due to continuous globalization, school systems are increasingly perceived, analyzed, and described in a global perspective. The development of respective theoretical foundations describing students’ learning within the school system can be tracked back to the 1960s when the idea of opportunity to learn developed. Recent extensions are based upon the input-process-and-output models and draw from economic and system theories. They provide a comprehensive and elaborated framework describing learning as a dynamic process within the school system. The main aim of this chapter is to first review the most prominent frameworks of school learning. Next, ILSAs are reviewed with respect to the extent they draw implicitly or explicitly on these frameworks. Finally, possibilities for further developments are discussed. The structure of the chapter follows these aims.
Lizenz:
  • info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Quellsystem:
Forschungsinformationssystem der UHH

Interne Metadaten
Quelldatensatz
oai:www.edit.fis.uni-hamburg.de:publications/816d85f3-25d5-4eb7-bcef-f220e2fff4f6