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Comparing Elephants and Bananas in Educational Achievements: What Do Data Reveal?

Tihomira Trifonova
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Tihomira Trifonova: Centre Immigration and Integration, Bulgaria

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Abstract: The problem of functional illiteracy emerged in the Bulgarian society when the results of the OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA test) were announced. Until then it was not aware of such a deficit. The national external assessment of students' educational achievements did not give any signs of a pervasive systemic deficit in the Bulgarian education. A comparison of the two tests' scores however reveals a considerable discrepancy. Looking at the tests' metadata, it becomes obvious the comparison is between elephants and bananas and that explains the inconsistency. e PISA test is an OECD instrument to put the journey to a learning society on track. It is future-oriented and reflects the changing needs of economic and productive life. PISA measures achievements through the learning society principles that include instrumentalism and pragmatism, therefore focusing on skills and competences. It discerns the types of knowledge needed by the future 'knowledge workers' that need to be adaptable, which all industries will be increasingly dependent upon. is paper compares the two datasets of students' scores and the tests' measuring methodologies. It concludes that the national education system has a conceptual basis and measurement tools that are different from OECD's. It further concludes that the national system fails to adapt to the needs of a changing society. However, it has an important ally in the face of the civil society, which provides its own resources to satisfy learning needs.

Keywords: Learning society; functional illiteracy; educational achievements; knowledge worker (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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