Historical Amnesia
A number of initiatives have been put forth over the last decade to improve quality in Norwegian schools. Many have been nationwide government-initiated programs. However, several studies express concern about the actual effect of these programs, and some also point to a lack of local anchoring and...
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Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences
2018-11-01
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doaj-f96a9c6c9cdd4e2f8794d957dc1d12572020-11-24T22:25:14ZengOslo and Akershus University College of Applied SciencesNordic Journal of Comparative and International Education2535-40512018-11-0122-310.7577/njcie.2806Historical AmnesiaEirik Johannes Irgens0NTNU A number of initiatives have been put forth over the last decade to improve quality in Norwegian schools. Many have been nationwide government-initiated programs. However, several studies express concern about the actual effect of these programs, and some also point to a lack of local anchoring and involvement of teachers. In this article, I draw on studies of one such program. Ungdomstrinn i utvikling (Lower Sec-ondary in Development) was a five-year school-based competence development program in more than 1200 lower-secondary level schools. We found that the local start-up phase and the co-determination of the teach-ers were crucial, and few schools drew on knowledge from the 1960s in Norway on how to organize dia-logue seminars so teachers might have a chance to participate in the local design of the program and estab-lish a shared understanding and knowledge of the challenges at hand. Instead, we found examples of a transaction perspective and an “order and deliver” model of competence development. I discuss this as a possible consequence of the influence of instrumental management theory and why the Nordic cooperation model, even though challenging for school leaders, local union representatives and teachers, would be a better approach to school development. Lastly, I argue that we should avoid historical amnesia and that we would probably be better off if we revived the knowledge from the 1960s and after on co-generation and collaboration. https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2806school developmenteducational leadershipnational cultureco-creation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eirik Johannes Irgens |
spellingShingle |
Eirik Johannes Irgens Historical Amnesia Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education school development educational leadership national culture co-creation |
author_facet |
Eirik Johannes Irgens |
author_sort |
Eirik Johannes Irgens |
title |
Historical Amnesia |
title_short |
Historical Amnesia |
title_full |
Historical Amnesia |
title_fullStr |
Historical Amnesia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Historical Amnesia |
title_sort |
historical amnesia |
publisher |
Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences |
series |
Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education |
issn |
2535-4051 |
publishDate |
2018-11-01 |
description |
A number of initiatives have been put forth over the last decade to improve quality in Norwegian schools. Many have been nationwide government-initiated programs. However, several studies express concern about the actual effect of these programs, and some also point to a lack of local anchoring and involvement of teachers. In this article, I draw on studies of one such program. Ungdomstrinn i utvikling (Lower Sec-ondary in Development) was a five-year school-based competence development program in more than 1200 lower-secondary level schools. We found that the local start-up phase and the co-determination of the teach-ers were crucial, and few schools drew on knowledge from the 1960s in Norway on how to organize dia-logue seminars so teachers might have a chance to participate in the local design of the program and estab-lish a shared understanding and knowledge of the challenges at hand. Instead, we found examples of a transaction perspective and an “order and deliver” model of competence development. I discuss this as a possible consequence of the influence of instrumental management theory and why the Nordic cooperation model, even though challenging for school leaders, local union representatives and teachers, would be a better approach to school development. Lastly, I argue that we should avoid historical amnesia and that we would probably be better off if we revived the knowledge from the 1960s and after on co-generation and collaboration.
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topic |
school development educational leadership national culture co-creation |
url |
https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2806 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT eirikjohannesirgens historicalamnesia |
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