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  5. The power of relation-making: insights into the production and operation of digital school performance platforms in the US
 
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The power of relation-making: insights into the production and operation of digital school performance platforms in the US

Publication date
2021
Document type
Research article
Author
Hartong, Sigrid 
Organisational unit
Transformation von Governance in Bildung und Gesellschaft 
DOI
10.1080/17508487.2020.1749861
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/14391
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85083565488
ISSN
1750-8495
1750-8487
Series or journal
Critical studies in education : formerly Melbourne studies in education
Periodical volume
62
Periodical issue
1
First page
34
Last page
49
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
  • Additional Information
Keyword
Critical data studies
School monitoring
School performance platforms
State education agencies
Topological lens
Abstract
This contribution takes a critical perspective on digital school performance platforms (SPP), which today play a key role in US state education monitoring and accountability. Using examples from two different US state education agencies, I provide an analytical disentanglement of some key dimensions of such platforms’ enactment and materiality. I do so using a topological lens, which in recent years has increasingly been adopted in education policy research as a useful tool for capturing complex and simultaneously generative manifestations of the digital. In the case of platforms, such a topological lens focuses on the power of relation-making and, consequently, on the fabrication and stabilization of particular data representations of education through relational (platform) settings, while simultaneously embracing the ongoing enactment and dynamism of these settings through various data practices. As an empirical example of this ambiguity, this contribution discusses the complex, highly dynamic relational production of US school performance platforms as reported by state education agency experts, as well as the invisibilization of these very production processes when observing the seemingly neutral, compressed, simplified and ready-to-use platforms themselves. Consequently, despite their customized and interactive nature, such platforms powerfully (re)shape what is publicly perceived and can be acted upon as ‘good’ schooling.
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