Exploring transnational standards-based curricula in classroom settings - the Swedish case
Author(s):
Daniel Sundberg (presenting / submitting) Ninni Wahlström (presenting)
Conference:
ECER 2016
Format:
Paper

Session Information

03 SES 04 A, Curriculum Change in Schools and Classrooms

Paper Session

Time:
2016-08-24
09:00-10:30
Room:
NM-A106
Chair:
Mark Priestley

Contribution

The multiplication of regulatory activities, actors, networks and constellations in the education policy sector, at both the national and transnational level, have changed the premises for national curriculum-making (Anderson-Levitt 2008). The policy exchange concerns crucial questions such as schooling for social cohesion and multicultural citizenship, for a sustainable future, for enterprise and innovation and critical literacy including digital literacy. The arguments for restructuring the curriculum and including future key competencies have stressed that in order to achieve technological progress, economic growth and social wellbeing there is a need for a mix of highly specialised and generic skills (Rychen & Salganik 2001). In this context, the European Commission wants the key competencies to be made more visible in the national school curriculum (European Commission 2007). Due to a rapid expansion of testing and standardized comparisons of high stakes outcomes there have been a shift in curriculum discourses from subject-specific to generic curriculum criteria and to an increased focus on learning outcomes (Sundberg & Wahlström 2012).

Many European countries are facing increased performance pressures in raising curriculum standards and achievements. Sweden is one such example where the results and outcomes constitute the underlying principle for the new curriculum’s structure, with a close alignment between purpose, content, results and assessment (Swedish National Agency for Education 2011). Generally, a standards-based curriculum means there are clear expectations on students and their knowledge acquirement, that an assessment system that oversees their knowledge acquirement can be offered, and that this assessment is centrally regulated. It also means that the responsibility for education and student learning is decentralised to a local level, and that teachers and schools can be held responsible for deficits in student performance. Recent curriculum research suggests that standards-based and results-driven curricula have far-reaching consequences for education at large, including teaching and assessment practices. It is therefore crucial to explore this relation further. But although there is much research on student learning in the classroom environment, we do not know very much about how the curriculum content (as key competencies) and standardized curriculum requirements affect teachers their teaching.

More specifically, in this paper, teachers’ content theories when they transform curriculum content to actual curriculum events in classrooms are in focus. Based on a theory of teaching as curriculum events (Doyle 1992) and a theory of different versions and repertoires of teaching (Alexander 2001) the paper elaborates a theoretical framework for describing, comparing and explaining curriculum events in classroom settings. The analysis specifically pay attention to the following three repertoires (Alexander 2008): organizing interaction (i.e. whole class teaching, group work, one-to-one activity), teaching talk (i.e. rote, recitation, instruction/exposition, discussion and dialogue), and learning talk (i.e. to narrate, explain, instruct, ask questions, receive answers, analyze and solve problems, imagine, explore and evaluate ideas, discuss, argue and reason, negotiate) and how they are recontextualised, or played, out in classroom communiation.

The aim of this research paper is, by using the recent Swedish curriculum reform, Lgr 11 as a case, to highlight, describe, analyse and develop concepts for understanding and explaining relations between (trans-) national curriculum standards at one hand and its curriculum configurations in classroom practice on the other. In this paper our research questions are the following:

- What organizational repertoires do teachers think are most in line with current policy and how does it differ between different school subjects?

- What implications of standards-based curriculum reform can be distinguished in terms of pedagogical communicative repertoires, conceptualized as teaching talk and learning talk, by drawing on comparative classroom methodology?

Method

The methodological design follows what Teddlie & Tashakkori (2009) call an explanatory sequential design, the idea being to achieve explanatory inferences when analysing findings generated by different methods. Here, the methods that are used as complementary and together can enhance, clarify and expand the range of inquiry. In the paper we have used the explanatory design in a three-step procedure, consisting of: 1 Text analysis (four separate studies) on transnational and national curriculum policy: Critical Discourse Analysis (n=29) 2 Quantitative analyses of teachers’ understanding and performance of the enacted curriculum reform Lgr 11 (n= 1887) and qualitative analyses of follow-up interviews (n= 18) 3 Video-analysis in classrooms settings with follow-up interviews of teachers and students (stimulated recall) In the first, background study on educational policy on a transnational and national level, the methodological approach is text analysis centred on intertextuality, where we base our understanding of discourses on critical discourse analysis (CDA) as outlined by Fairclough (2010). By “transnational” we mean discursive policy aims and agreements negotiated in intergovernmental organizations such as the OECD and the EU. The second background study is focusing on the teachers’ understanding and performance of the (enacted) curriculum reform, viewed from their own perspective through their responses to questionnaires and interviews. The survey is conducted through a web-based questionnaire sent to 2 963 teachers, teaching in year six and year nine in compulsory public schools during the fall semester 2013 in 21 Swedish municipalities. The response rate was 64 % (or 1887 respondents). The survey was followed up by 18 interviews with teachers from different types of municipalities. The foreground study (3) in this paper is oriented towards classroom discourses to capture and understand an extended range of teaching and learning repertoires in the enacted curriculum. The purpose is to examine in what different ways the curriculum Lgr 11 is interpreted and translated in concrete teaching actions and meanings. The classroom study includes 6 classes at 6 different schools, school year 6. Each classroom observation consists of 12 lessons and the data collection period covers a full school year (2015/2016). The data is collected by video-recordings, observations, field notes and interviews. Follow up interviews (post-video-analysis) with teachers and students in the selected classes are conducted according to a fine-grained observation scheme to allow for comparative analysis of communicative situations and sequences in instructional settings (Alexander 2001, Klette 2009).

Expected Outcomes

The results suggest a transnational convergence in curriculum policy making in aligning economic, social, education, and life-long learning policies, and giving rise to a supranational macro-regulation. With respect to education and curricular policies, this convergence process has, in the case of Sweden, been translated into the recovery of a technical and instrumental conception of teaching. The increasingly complex decision chains of curriculum making at different levels and arenas emphasize a strengthened coordinative discourse on a transnational arena centred on models of administrative control, rational techniques and have paved the way for a performance- and production oriented curriculum model. The results indicate a tension between ‘distinct goals and knowledge requirements’ (Official report 2007:28) formulated in policy, and ‘the doing’ of curriculum in terms of the teachers’ deliberation and judgment in curriculum decisions. In the background teacher survey, 75 % of the teachers in the social study subject agreed with the claim that “I think that curriculum Lgr 11 largely controls the selection of content in my teaching”. The teachers especially in the social studies respond that both their own and their students’ influence of selection of content have diminished with the most recent curriculum reform, Lgr 11. Social studies teachers agreed correspondingly that whole class instruction is in line with both the Lgr 11(22%) and with their own approaches (25%). The video analysis of classroom teaching year 6 indicate that five years after the curriculum initiation there have been changes in organizing, teaching and learning repertoires. The results point to a decreasing local space for coordinative discourses where teachers act as co-constructors of curricula. As the summative assessment is emphasized, preliminary results show that the curriculum enactment pushes teachers’ teaching repertoires towards rote, recitation, and instruction/exposition and to a less degree towards dialogue and discussion.

References

Alexander, Robin J. (2001). Culture and pedagogy: international comparisons in primary education. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers. Anderson-Levitt, Kathryn, M. (2008). Globalization and Curriculum. In: Connelly, F. Michael F. He, Ming Fang & Phillion, JoAnn (Eds.). The SAGE Handbook of Curriculum and Instruction. Sage Publications. Doyle, Walter (1992): Curriculum and Pedagogy. In Philip W. Jackson: Handbook of Research on Curriculum, pp. 486-516. New York: Macmillan. European Communities (2007). Key competences for lifelong learning: European reference framework. Luxemburg: European Communities. Fairclough, N. (2010). Critical discourse analysis: The critical study of language (2. ed). Harlow: Longman. Klette, Kirsti (2009): Challenges in strategies for complexity reduction in video studies. Experiences from the PISA+ study: A video study of teaching and learning in Norway. In: Tomâs Janik & Tina Siedel, eds.: The Power of Video Studies in Investigating Teaching and Learning in the Classroom, pp. 61 - 83. Münster: Waxmann Publishing. Rychen, D. S., & Salganik, L. H. (Eds.). (2001). Defining and Selecting Key Competencies. Seattle: Hogrefe & Huber Publishers. Official report (2007: 28). Distinct goals and knowledge requirements in school. Stockholm: The Swedish Ministry of Education. Sundberg, Daniel & Wahlström, Ninni (2012). Standards-based Curricula in a Denationalised conception of Education – the case of Sweden. European educational research journal,11(3), 342-356. Swedish National Agency for Education (2011). Curriculum for the Compulsory School, Preschool Class and the Leisure-time Centre. Lgr 11. Stockholm: The National Agency for Education. Teddlie, C. & Tashakkori, A. (2009). Foundations of mixed methods research: Integrating quantitative and qualitative approaches in the social and behavioral sciences. Los Angeles, California: Sage.

Author Information

Daniel Sundberg (presenting / submitting)
Linnaeus university
Education
Vaxjo
Ninni Wahlström (presenting)
Linnaeus university, Sweden

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