ABSTRACT

Testing and Inclusive Schooling provides a comparative perspective on seemingly incompatible global agendas and efforts to include all children in the general school system, thus reducing exclusion. With an examination of the international testing culture and the politics of inclusion currently permeating national school reforms, this book raises a critical and constructive discussion of these movements, which appear to support one another, yet simultaneously offer profound contradictions.

With contributions from around the world, the book analyses the dilemma arising between reforms that urge schools to move towards a constantly higher academic level, and those who practice a politics of inclusion leading to a greater degree of student diversity. The book considers the types of problems that arise when reforms implemented at the international level are transformed into policies and practices, firmly placing global educational efforts into perspective by highlighting a range of different cases at both national and local levels.

Testing and Inclusive Schooling sheds light on new possibilities for educational improvements in global and local contexts and is essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students interested in international and comparative education, assessment technologies and practices, inclusion, educational psychology and educational policy.

section I|86 pages

Testing and school reforms

chapter 1|16 pages

Educational testing, the question of the public good, and room for inclusion

A comparative study of Scotland and the United States

chapter 2|15 pages

Minorities and educational testing in schools in Arctic regions

An analysis and discussion focusing on normality, democracy, and inclusion for the cases of Greenland and the Swedish Sami schools

chapter 3|13 pages

Educational opportunity between meritocracy and equity

A review of the National College Entrance Examination in China since 1977

chapter 4|17 pages

The ‘problem’ of ‘quality’ schooling, national testing, and inclusion

Australian insights into policy and practice

chapter |8 pages

The banality of numbers

section II|93 pages

The agenda of inclusion

section III|81 pages

Inclusion and psychological assessment

chapter 11|16 pages

Inclusion

The Cinderella concept in educational policy in Latin America

chapter 12|16 pages

Psychiatric testing and everyday school life

Collaborative work with diagnosed children

chapter |6 pages

Inclusion and assessment

Complicated and complex

chapter |8 pages

Optimizing the educational subject between testing and inclusion in an era of neoliberalism

Musings on a research agenda and its future perspectives