1st Edition

Measuring the Unmeasurable in Education

Edited By Elaine Unterhalter Copyright 2019
180 Pages
by Routledge

180 Pages
by Routledge

180 Pages
by Routledge

Debates around quality versus quantity in education can generate controversy about how quality is measured. Many question the drive to delineate and quantify precisely what works, suggesting that much value either cannot be measured or is distorted by measurement. This book explores how we can understand measurement in areas of education policy, planning, and practice that have not previously... Read more

1. Negative capability? Measuring the unmeasurable in education  2. The limits of measurement: misplaced precision, phronesis, and other Aristotelian cautions for the makers of PISA, APPR, etc.  3. Assessing needs, fostering development: UNESCO, illiteracy and the global politics of education (1945–1960)  4. Valuing and revaluing education: what can we learn about measurement from the South African poor?  5. Evolving approaches to the study of childhood poverty and education  6. Can mobile health training meet the challenge of ‘measuring better’?  7. The professoriate: the challenged subject in US higher education  8. Towards measuring the economic value of higher education: lessons from South Africa

Biography

Elaine Unterhalter is Professor of Education and International Development at University College London, UK and Co-Director of the Centre for Education and International Development. She has written extensively on global education policy making, with a particular interest in equity in practice and the politics of measurement. Her book, Education, Poverty and Global Goals for Gender Equality (with Amy North, 2017), looks at how the measurement of poverty, education, and gender equality is interpreted by practitioners in a range of international, national, and local organisations.