Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State: Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists

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Standard

Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State : Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists. / Ydesen, Christian; Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof; Egedal Andreasen, Karen.

I: Nordic Journal of Educational History, Bind 5, Nr. 1, 2018, s. 73–96.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ydesen, C, Hamre, BF & Egedal Andreasen, K 2018, 'Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State: Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists', Nordic Journal of Educational History, bind 5, nr. 1, s. 73–96. <http://ojs.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/126/80>

APA

Ydesen, C., Hamre, B. F., & Egedal Andreasen, K. (2018). Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State: Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists. Nordic Journal of Educational History, 5(1), 73–96. http://ojs.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/126/80

Vancouver

Ydesen C, Hamre BF, Egedal Andreasen K. Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State: Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists. Nordic Journal of Educational History. 2018;5(1):73–96.

Author

Ydesen, Christian ; Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof ; Egedal Andreasen, Karen. / Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State : Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists. I: Nordic Journal of Educational History. 2018 ; Bind 5, Nr. 1. s. 73–96.

Bibtex

@article{e2738ecb73974777b66801fef26d877d,
title = "Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State: Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists",
abstract = "Historically, numerous contextual factors have influenced the practice of differentiating students. Scholars and practitioners consider it a context-sensitive practice subject to negotiations and entanglements among various agents, groups, interests, ideas, and values. Drawing on Foucault, this article pursues the practices, negotiations, and entanglements surrounding differentiation processes and IQ testing{\textquoteright}s use in the early Danish welfare state. We argue that the differentiating practice of IQ testing in the Danish educational system resulted from various factors, including the increasing professionalisation of the educational system. This practice entailed an increased division of labour among professional groups; debates reflecting differing ideas about eugenics, heredity, and social equality; the schooling of psychologists and psychiatrists in Denmark; and the development of psychology and psychiatry as academic disciplines. In that sense, we will demonstrate that changes in society{\textquoteright}s understanding of intelligence incorporating a greater use of environmental explanations can be said to reflect the emerging welfare society{\textquoteright}s security mechanisms, and a willingness to cope with and address social inequality in an evolving and supposedly universalistic Danish welfare state",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Intelligence testing, welfare state, professions, Denmark, Foucault",
author = "Christian Ydesen and Hamre, {Bj{\o}rn Frithiof} and {Egedal Andreasen}, Karen",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "73–96",
journal = "Nordic Journal of Educational History",
issn = "2001-7766",
publisher = "Ume{\aa} University",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Differentiation of Students in the Early Danish Welfare State

T2 - Professional Entanglements Between Educational Psychologists and Psychiatrists

AU - Ydesen, Christian

AU - Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof

AU - Egedal Andreasen, Karen

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Historically, numerous contextual factors have influenced the practice of differentiating students. Scholars and practitioners consider it a context-sensitive practice subject to negotiations and entanglements among various agents, groups, interests, ideas, and values. Drawing on Foucault, this article pursues the practices, negotiations, and entanglements surrounding differentiation processes and IQ testing’s use in the early Danish welfare state. We argue that the differentiating practice of IQ testing in the Danish educational system resulted from various factors, including the increasing professionalisation of the educational system. This practice entailed an increased division of labour among professional groups; debates reflecting differing ideas about eugenics, heredity, and social equality; the schooling of psychologists and psychiatrists in Denmark; and the development of psychology and psychiatry as academic disciplines. In that sense, we will demonstrate that changes in society’s understanding of intelligence incorporating a greater use of environmental explanations can be said to reflect the emerging welfare society’s security mechanisms, and a willingness to cope with and address social inequality in an evolving and supposedly universalistic Danish welfare state

AB - Historically, numerous contextual factors have influenced the practice of differentiating students. Scholars and practitioners consider it a context-sensitive practice subject to negotiations and entanglements among various agents, groups, interests, ideas, and values. Drawing on Foucault, this article pursues the practices, negotiations, and entanglements surrounding differentiation processes and IQ testing’s use in the early Danish welfare state. We argue that the differentiating practice of IQ testing in the Danish educational system resulted from various factors, including the increasing professionalisation of the educational system. This practice entailed an increased division of labour among professional groups; debates reflecting differing ideas about eugenics, heredity, and social equality; the schooling of psychologists and psychiatrists in Denmark; and the development of psychology and psychiatry as academic disciplines. In that sense, we will demonstrate that changes in society’s understanding of intelligence incorporating a greater use of environmental explanations can be said to reflect the emerging welfare society’s security mechanisms, and a willingness to cope with and address social inequality in an evolving and supposedly universalistic Danish welfare state

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Intelligence testing

KW - welfare state

KW - professions

KW - Denmark

KW - Foucault

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 73

EP - 96

JO - Nordic Journal of Educational History

JF - Nordic Journal of Educational History

SN - 2001-7766

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 188873412