Publication | Closed Access
A new global policy regime founded on invalid statistics? Hanushek, Woessmann, PISA, and economic growth
145
Citations
35
References
2017
Year
Regime AnalysisDevelopment EconomicsEducationPolicy AnalysisEconomic GrowthRigorous Global DiscussionEducational PolicyFlawed StatisticsPolitical EconomyGovernment PolicyEconomicsPublic PolicyEducational StatisticsInfluential Comparative StudiesHigher EducationEconomic PolicyGlobal ComparisonBusinessInvalid StatisticsEducation ReformEducation PolicyPolitical ScienceEducation Economics
Several recent, highly influential comparative studies have made strong statistical claims that improvements on global learning assessments such as PISA will lead to higher GDP growth rates. These claims have provided the primary source of legitimation for policy reforms championed by leading international organisations, most notably the World Bank and OECD. To date there have been several critiques but these have been too limited to challenge the validity of the claims. The consequence is continued utilisation and citation of these strong claims, resulting in a growing aura of scientific truth and concrete policy reforms. In this piece we report findings from two original studies that invalidate these statistical claims. Our intent is to contribute to a more rigorous global discussion on education policy, as well as call attention to the fact that the new global policy regime is founded on flawed statistics.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1