“…'The globalisation of education' has resulted in increased global inequalities (Zajda, 2015;Connell, 2013), notwithstanding, the confusions and challenges of implementing global educational reforms (O'Leary & Wood, 2016). Since the advent of the PISA media 'phenomenon' educators and scholars have begun to see beyond the 'hype', for instance, Biesta (2015) indicates the deeper theoretical and practical consequences from an overt focus on 'numbers ', 'measurements' and 'comparisons' in education. PISA as a discursive construct has been problematised in relation to the ways PISA has had an adverse effect on teaching and learning (Serder & Ideland, 2016), in the ways PISA has shaped hegemonic discourses in terms of what is 'thinkable' and 'doable' in education (Bonal & Tarabini, 2013), and, how PISA has discursively been utilised as a political tool in shaping educational policies and national educational discourses (Vega Gil et al, 2016). Pocock (2014) hints at the problems of generalisations and assumptions in education especially with regard to essentialising peoples and/or groups, as Gamboa and Waltenberg (2015) show, PISA relies on a number of generalisations and assumptions about education systems and peoples alike.…”