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Featured researches published by Mira Kalalahti.


Journal of School Choice | 2014

Families, School Choice, and Democratic Iterations on the Right to Education and Freedom of Education in Finnish Municipalities

Janne Varjo; Mira Kalalahti; Heikki Silvennoinen

This article analyzes the ways in which the right to education and freedom of education are expressed in local school choice policies in Finland. We aim to discover the elements that form democratic iterations on the right to education and freedom of education by contrasting their manifestations in three local institutional spaces for parental school choice. We focus on different levels of structures and agents including national legislation, local spaces for school choice, municipal demographics, and the impact of socioeconomic status and institutional space for school choice on parental attitudes.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2017

Immigrant-origin youth and the indecisiveness of choice for upper secondary education in Finland

Mira Kalalahti; Janne Varjo; Markku Jahnukainen

ABSTRACT The educational transitions of Finnish youth of immigrant background are challenging. They confront more difficulties in a twofold manner: they have more difficulties in transitioning to upper secondary education and they seem to drop out of education more often than their Finnish-origin counterparts. This study aimed to accomplish a view of the complex intertwinement of attitudes and experiences with upper secondary education choices, gender and origin. We compared immigrant- origin students (n = 161) with Finnish-origin students (n = 156) in a survey conducted during the final year of comprehensive school. Our objectives were to analyse the variation in attitudes, experiences and aspirations concerning post-comprehensive transition in gender and origin of the youth, and to analyse the factors behind the indecisiveness of the transitions. We concluded that youth with immigrant origin in general, and boys in particular, share a contradiction we termed the ‘paradox of immigrant schooling’, which refers to the combination of a positivity toward education and difficulties in learning and studying. We also found an immigrant-related contradiction between determinant and quite high occupational aspirations, and uncertainty of upper secondary choices. Our outcomes indicate that the immigrant-origin youth confront the upper-secondary choices in a much more complex and multidimensional situation than their Finnish-origin counterparts.


Archive | 2016

Recognizing and Controlling the Social Costs of Parental School Choice

Janne Varjo T.; Mira Kalalahti; Lisbeth Lundahl

Due to the general emphasis on individualization and choice, the principles and practices directing the admission and selection of pupils to comprehensive schools have changed both in Finland and Sweden. In Finland school choice takes place within the public comprehensive school system (through classes with a special emphasis), whereas in Sweden the choice also occurs between private and public schools.


European Educational Research Journal | 2015

The Conceivable Benefits of Being Comprehensive--Finnish Local Education Authorities on Recognising and Controlling the Social Costs of School Choice.

Janne Varjo; Mira Kalalahti

Since the 1980s, numerous education reforms have sought to dismantle centralised bureaucracies and replace them with devolved systems of schooling that emphasise parental choice and competition between increasingly diversified types of schools. Nevertheless, the Finnish variety of post-comprehensivism continues to emphasise municipal assignment of school places, in the form of the neighbourhood school principle; albeit, in its current form, with the possibility for locally controlled choice and competition, channelled especially through classes with a special emphasis. Based on nine in-depth thematic interviews with experts in provision, management or evaluation of local level compulsory education, this paper focuses on how the conceivable costs and benefits of school choice are recognised and controlled in urban Finnish municipalities. Two distinctive discourses were found to be embodied in the portrayals of the costs and benefits of choice: the legitimization of school choice; and promoting the comprehensive system. The legitimation of school choice discourse is built on the acceptable, but strictly limited reasons for choice, and necessity of school choice. In contrast, the discourse of fostering the comprehensive system is based on the ideology of equality of educational opportunities. It is constructed upon the traditional, universal, non-selective features of the comprehensive school. Against this background, possibilities for school choice can be, and must be, locally controlled – even restricted, if needed – in order to prevent a vicious circle of failing schools in deprived neighbourhoods.


Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2018

Facing Uncertainty yet Feeling Confident: Teenage Migrant Girls’ Agencies in Upper Secondary School Transitions

Marja-Liisa Mäkelä; Mira Kalalahti

ABSTRACT This article concentrates on the transition from comprehensive school to the upper secondary level from the viewpoint of migrant background girls. Emphasis is on understanding the bounded agency and the ways in which gender and family background are expressed in the modalities of the agency. Previous studies show that ethnic minorities have more difficulties in school, and they continue to higher education less frequently than the majority of students. We are interested in the aspirations of migrant background girls (n = 34) concerning their post-comprehensive transition. Our focus is on the experienced agency during the last year of comprehensive school. Our research questions are: What kinds of modalities do migrant background girls use when considering their educational choices? How do these modalities reflect their bounded agency? The study shows that although the experienced agency is universal among the age group, there are specific ethnic and gender connotations.


Research in Comparative and International Education | 2018

The governors of school markets? Local education authorities, school choice and equity in Finland and Sweden

Janne Varjo; Ulf Lundström; Mira Kalalahti

As one of the key elements of the Nordic welfare model, education systems are based on the idea of providing equal educational opportunities, regardless of gender, social class and geographic origin. Since the 1990s, Nordic welfare states have undergone a gradual but wide-ranging transformation towards a more market-based mode of public service delivery. Along this trajectory, the advent of school choice policy and the growing variation in the between-school achievement results have diversified the previously homogenous Nordic education systems. The aim of our paper is to analyse how Finnish and Swedish local education authorities comprehend and respond to the intertwinement of the market logic of school choice and the ideology of equality. The data consist of two sets of in-depth thematic interviews with staff from the local providers of education, municipal education authorities. The analysis discloses the ways in which national legislation has authorized municipal authorities to govern the provision of education.


Education inquiry | 2018

The art of governing local education markets – municipalities and school choice in Finland

Janne Varjo; Mira Kalalahti

ABSTRACT Since the 1980s, numerous education reforms in Europe and beyond have sought to dismantle centralised bureaucracies and replace them with devolved systems of schooling that emphasise parental choice and competition between diversified types of schools. Despite this general trend, Finland continues to emphasise the municipal assignment of school places, albeit with the possibility of locally controlled choice. The aim of this paper is to elaborate on the ways in which Finnish local education authorities – involving both officials and politicians – define themselves in relation to the changing conceptions of the Nordic welfare state model. The paper discusses the social costs and benefits of school choice in addition to the kinds of techniques these authorities use when aiming to control and manage the social costs and benefits of school choice. Based on nine in-depth thematic interviews with local education authorities, the modalities – having to, being-able, wanting and knowing how – will be analysed.


Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2017

Changes in Children’s Agency Beliefs and Control Expectancy in Classes With and Without a Special Emphasis in Finland from Grade Four to Grade Six

Satu Koivuhovi; Mari-Pauliina Vainikainen; Mira Kalalahti; Markku Niemivirta

ABSTRACT This study examined changes in pupils’ agency beliefs and control expectancy from grade four to grade six, and whether they were associated with studying in a class with a special emphasis on a subject as compared to studying in a class without emphasis. After controlling for the effects of mother’s education, prior school achievement, and gender, we found that the average pattern of change varied for different action-control beliefs, and that class membership did not moderate these changes. Mother’s education, pupils’ prior school achievement, and gender all predicted class membership, but their effects on action-control beliefs varied depending on the type of belief. Implications for educational policy will be discussed.


Archive | 2017

Differentiation and Diversification in Compulsory Education: A Conceptual Analysis

Lauri Ojalehto; Mira Kalalahti; Janne Varjo; Sonja Kosunen

What is meant by school differentiation and diversification and how can such multifaceted phenomena be precisely described and conceptualized? The authors illustrate linguistic, conceptual, and epistemological challenges that researchers face in defining these phenomena. Looking beyond narrow theoretical frames and disciplinary boundaries, they analyze conceptualizations of school differentiation and diversification and examine related terms, such as segregation, stratification, and polarization. The authors explore school differentiation from various angles, including societal differentiation, diversity of school populations, symbolic hierarchies, and curricular diversity. The chapter offers a broad perspective on school differentiation as well as conceptual tools for understanding the processes of societal differentiation in compulsory education.


Kasvatus & Aika | 2012

Tasa-arvo ja oikeudenmukaisuus perusopetukseen sijoittumisessa ja valikoitumisessa

Mira Kalalahti; Janne Varjo

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Janne Varjo

University of Helsinki

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