Speaking from the stomach? Ventriloquised ethnocentrisms about Finnish education

Ashley Simpson, Fred Dervin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

In recent years the words ‘Finnish education’ have been accompanied by utterances of ‘an education miracle’, ‘the best education system’, ‘a success’ and a number of other adjectives and superlatives to ‘describe’ education in Finland. While Finland’s PISA ranking has declined media interest and discourses on ‘Finnish education’ have not relented. Seemingly, Finland’s educational system is as popular as it has ever been. Finland’s education system is viewed with ‘international admiration’ yet behind these discourses are a number of discursive contradictions. Using the discursive concept of ventriloquism (Tannen, 2010; Cooren, 2014) we show how ‘Finnish education’ has become ventriloquised ‐ when ‘Finnish education’ is uttered a number of automatically generated responses are uttered by speakers. In this sense, discourses on ‘the success of the Finnish education system’ act as prevailing meta-discourses. We argue that, behind these constructs, can too easily lie ventriloquised discourses reinforcing and (re)producing Finnish ethnocentrisms, intercultural ignorance and a lack of regard for the other. Through analysing the discourses of specific educators and academics on ‘Finnish education’ we show that behind the ‘hype’ and meta-discourses on the Finnish education system lie possible sentiments of (hidden) ethnocentrisms, (hidden) xenophobia, and (hidden) racism.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5-29
Number of pages25
JournalEducational Practice and Theory
Volume39
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Apr 2017

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Finland
  • othering
  • education
  • ethnocentrisms
  • heteroglossia
  • ventriloquism

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