Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally

This paper provides a descriptive analysis of the OECD’s (2007) national report on Scottish education, Quality and equity of schooling in Scotland, while also briefly considering the Scottish government’s Diagnostic Report, prepared for the review. The national report is situated against Scottish tr...

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Main Authors: Bob Lingard, Shaun Rawolle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Aberdeen, School of Education 2009-11-01
Series:Education in the North
Online Access:https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/35/
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spelling doaj-40176cd21a6c49368c29bdbd4bd290642021-09-13T23:23:30ZengUniversity of Aberdeen, School of EducationEducation in the North0424-55122398-01842009-11-0117110.26203/gne9-jp36Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globallyBob Lingard0Shaun Rawolle1University of QueenslandCharles Stuart UniversityThis paper provides a descriptive analysis of the OECD’s (2007) national report on Scottish education, Quality and equity of schooling in Scotland, while also briefly considering the Scottish government’s Diagnostic Report, prepared for the review. The national report is situated against Scottish traditions of schooling, particularly the view that access to academic curricula for all is a democratic and egalitarian approach, and also set against the changing role of the OECD. On the latter, the paper argues that the OECD, in the context of globalisation, has become more of a policy actor in its own right, in addition to its more traditional think-tank function. The OECD is a now significant transnational policy actor in education, contributing to the emergent global education policy field. The overarching argument proffered is that debates provoked by the OECD’s report, for example the David Raffe/Richard Teese exchange in the Scottish Educational Review, 40(1), 2008, stem from tensions between the new supranational expression of political and policy authority as articulated in the OECD’s report and that located more traditionally within the nation. The academic curricula for all, the Scottish tradition, is challenged by the OECD report, which supports more diverse curricula provision, including more vocational education in schools, particularly at the post-compulsory phase. We note, drawing on theoretical and empirical insights of Bourdieu, that the success of the former demands pedagogies which scaffold for those students not possessing the requisite cultural capitals for success with academic curricula, while the latter demands a strategic effort to ensure parity of esteem between different curricular provisions. https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/35/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bob Lingard
Shaun Rawolle
spellingShingle Bob Lingard
Shaun Rawolle
Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
Education in the North
author_facet Bob Lingard
Shaun Rawolle
author_sort Bob Lingard
title Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
title_short Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
title_full Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
title_fullStr Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Quality and Equity of schooling in Scotland: Locating educational traditions globally
title_sort understanding quality and equity of schooling in scotland: locating educational traditions globally
publisher University of Aberdeen, School of Education
series Education in the North
issn 0424-5512
2398-0184
publishDate 2009-11-01
description This paper provides a descriptive analysis of the OECD’s (2007) national report on Scottish education, Quality and equity of schooling in Scotland, while also briefly considering the Scottish government’s Diagnostic Report, prepared for the review. The national report is situated against Scottish traditions of schooling, particularly the view that access to academic curricula for all is a democratic and egalitarian approach, and also set against the changing role of the OECD. On the latter, the paper argues that the OECD, in the context of globalisation, has become more of a policy actor in its own right, in addition to its more traditional think-tank function. The OECD is a now significant transnational policy actor in education, contributing to the emergent global education policy field. The overarching argument proffered is that debates provoked by the OECD’s report, for example the David Raffe/Richard Teese exchange in the Scottish Educational Review, 40(1), 2008, stem from tensions between the new supranational expression of political and policy authority as articulated in the OECD’s report and that located more traditionally within the nation. The academic curricula for all, the Scottish tradition, is challenged by the OECD report, which supports more diverse curricula provision, including more vocational education in schools, particularly at the post-compulsory phase. We note, drawing on theoretical and empirical insights of Bourdieu, that the success of the former demands pedagogies which scaffold for those students not possessing the requisite cultural capitals for success with academic curricula, while the latter demands a strategic effort to ensure parity of esteem between different curricular provisions.
url https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/35/
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