Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/7526
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Social Sciences Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Why 'What Works' Still Won't Work: From Evidence-Based Education to Value-Based Education
Author(s): Biesta, G J J
Contact Email: gertbiesta@gmail.com
Keywords: Evidence-based education
Evidence-based practice
Evidence-informed practice
What works
Epistemology
Ontology
Praxeology
Values
Value-based education
Power
Normativity
Issue Date: Sep-2010
Date Deposited: 22-Aug-2012
Citation: Biesta GJJ (2010) Why 'What Works' Still Won't Work: From Evidence-Based Education to Value-Based Education. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 29 (5), pp. 491-503. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-010-9191-x
Abstract: The idea that professional practices such as education should be based upon or at least be informed by evidence continues to capture the imagination of many politicians, policy makers, practitioners and researchers. There is growing evidence of the influence of this line of thought. At the same time there is a growing body of work that has raised fundamental questions about the feasibility of the idea of evidence-based or evidence-informed practice. In this paper I make a further contribution to this discussion through an analysis of a number of assumptions that inform the discussion. I focus on the epistemological, ontological and praxeological dimensions of the discussion and in each domain identify a deficit. In the epistemological domain there is a knowledge deficit, in the ontological domain an effectiveness or efficacy deficit and in the practice domain an application deficit. Taken together these deficits not only raise some important questions about the very idea of evidence-based practice but also highlight the role of normativity, power and values. Against this background I outline the case for the idea of value-based education as an alternative for evidence-based education. As I am generally concerned about the expectations policy makers hold about what evidence can and should achieve in professional practices such as education, my contribution is primarily meant to provide educators and other professionals with arguments that can help them to resist unwarranted expectations about the role of evidence in their practices and even more so of unwarranted interventions in their practices.
DOI Link: 10.1007/s11217-010-9191-x
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