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National newspaper-reporting on state examinations: an historical exposition of the exceptional case of the Irish Leaving Certificate

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posted on 2018-03-28, 08:29 authored by Tom O'Donoghue, Jim Gleeson, Orla Mc CormackOrla Mc Cormack
During a post-independence phase (1922-mid-sixties), Irish secondary schooling was characterised by low participation rates, elitism, and careerist perceptions of students. Phase two (1967-mid 1980s) saw participation rates expand dramatically as Ireland became more open and industrialised, and policymakers focused on relationships between education, human capital and economic development. During this phase, the Irish Times began to include careers and examinations information. With school completion rates continuing to increase from the mid-1980s (phase three), the two main daily newspapers realised that the growing need for information about access to an increasingly complex and highly-prized higher education system, which was dependent on academic achievement, afforded an opportunity to boost sales and advertising. In response, examinations' coverage reached a level recently described as 'exceptional by a team of researchers from the Oxford University Centre for Educational Assessment and Queen's University Belfast.

History

Publication

Encounters in Theory and History of Education | Rencontres en Théorie et Histoire de l'Éducation;18, pp. 134-149

Publisher

Queens University, Canada

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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