Journal article
Examification: curricular, temporal, affective, and discursive dimensions of examination’s effects on education
- Abstract:
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This article introduces examification, a new concept for understanding the far-reaching impacts of examinations on education. Examinations have long been integral to education systems, serving as markers of achievement and instruments of accountability. This article introduces examification as a new conceptual framework for analysing the wide-ranging and interconnected ways in which examinations shape curricula, pedagogy, temporal structures, emotional experiences, and educational discourses. Far from being neutral tools for assessing achievement, examinations (whether ‘high’ or ‘low’ stakes) emerge as powerful mechanisms that dictate what is taught, how it is taught, how success is defined, and how education is experienced. This conceptual paper examines four interconnected dimensions of examification: curriculum, time, affect, and discourse. It highlights how examinations compress and narrow subject choices, intensify and reshape temporal rhythms, provoke diverse affective responses, and perpetuate discourses that sustain hierarchies and the commodification of education. The article illustrates how these dimensions interact across individual, institutional, national, and global scales. While the impacts of examification are often negative, they are not uniform or inevitable; the concept invites critical engagement with examinations’ effects and possibilities for reform.
- Publication status:
- Accepted
- Peer review status:
- Peer reviewed
Actions
Authors
- Publisher:
- SAGE Publications
- Journal:
- European Educational Research Journal More from this journal
- Acceptance date:
- 2025-09-15
- EISSN:
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1474-9041
- Language:
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English
- Keywords:
- Pubs id:
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2288062
- Local pid:
-
pubs:2288062
- Deposit date:
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2025-09-15
Terms of use
- Rights statement:
- This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Notes:
- This article has been accepted for publication in European Educational Research Journal. This is the accepted manuscript version of the article.
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