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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Main Author: Eirik Johannes Irgens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences 2018-11-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/nordiccie/article/view/2806
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spelling 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.
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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