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Confronting Oppressive Assessments
How Parents, Educators, and Policymakers Are Rethinking Current Educational Reforms
Confronting Oppressive Assessments
How Parents, Educators, and Policymakers Are Rethinking Current Educational Reforms
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Description
This book is about doing what’s right for public education in the United States in this age of intensive curriculum convergence, planned instructional standardization, and oppressive accountability procedures. Information is presented about why and how educators, parents, students, community members, and policy-makers have decided to protest against current state and federal educational policies and procedures. The practical experiences of parents, teachers, principals, school superintendents, school board members, and professors are analyzed in chapters of this book. Their first-hand experiences with the various components of the current reform movement are poignantly presented. Through their voices the frustrations with the serious flaws associated with this reform agenda are passionately and logically articulated. They comprehensively explain their personal and professional motivations for organizing and fomenting a rethinking in school reform implementation procedures and they advocate their “smarter approach” to school reforms in our country. The book includes key references that elucidate the need to seriously re-think the directions and strategies of contemporary schooling in order to maintain enlightened creative instruction based on exciting student-centered curriculum experiences and professional educational judgments.
Table of Contents
Preface: Confronting Oppressive Assessments: How Parents, Educators, and Policy-Makers Are Rethinking Current Educational Reforms
Walter S. Polka and John McKenna
Chapter One: What Are We Really Doing to our Children? Rethinking Federal and State Education Reform Policies
Walter S. Polka and John E. McKenna
Chapter Two: Using an Industrial Age Paradigm for Education is Not Smart, Especially in the Digital Age
John E. McKenna and Walter S. Polka
Chapter Three:The Lack of Joy in Learning: Parents Want to Know Why Children Don’t Like School Anymore
Douglas J. Regan and Mary Beth Carroll
Chapter Four: Why Teachers Are Frustrated
Ashli Dreher and Kathy Brown
Chapter Five: High-Stakes Test Anxieties for All Children: Parents, Teachers, and Pscyhologists Voice Concerns
Laura Stewart-Beach, Kathy Brown, and Greg Fabiano
Chapter Six:Principals with Principles: The Dilemma of Implementing Destructive Polices
Charles Smilinich, Mark Mambretti, Douglas Regan, and John McKenna
Chapter Seven: Superintendents’ Perspectives: Fighting for Local Control and Justice in Education for All
Jeffrey Robert Rabey
Chapter Eight: Thoughts on What to Do Next at the Local Level
John McKenna and Walter Polka
Chapter Nine: A Dwindling Second Chance: High School Dropouts and the 2014 GED® Exam
Rachael J. Rossi
Chapter Ten: Everyone is Now a “Teacher of the Core”—Even Higher Education is Converged in This Reform Movement
Susan Krickovich and Donna Phillips
Chapter Eleven: Political Perspectives Regarding Changing the Current Educational Reform Agenda: The Winds of Change are Blowing Stronger
Walter S. Polka and John E. McKenna
Chapter Twelve: Why Not Create a Brighter Future for All of Our Students by Legislative Changes to the Educational Current Reforms? What If We Just Do It?
John E. McKenna and Walter S. Polka
Appendix
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Product details
Published | 14 Sep 2016 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 214 |
ISBN | 9781475826821 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 12 BW Illustrations |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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'I fought the law, and the law won.' So declares the Bobby Fuller Four in their 1960’s hit song. Many teachers, parents, and friends of public education have felt this sense of hopelessness and loss of power since the beginning of the No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top era as they faced a seemingly insurmountable force of political and corporate support of so-called 'educational reform,' which focuses on standardized testing, a narrowed curriculum, and hyper-criticism of teachers and schools. Polka and McKenna have accomplished the unlikely task of putting together a book that is both cathartic and empowering as readers hear from those in the trenches: parents, teachers, administrators, and university teacher educators who are fighting for what is best for children, and in many cases winning the battle. Read, be inspired, and then engage: There is much yet to be done, but this volume gives evidence that it can be done!
Terrell M. Peace Ph.D, Past President Association of Teacher Educators (ATE), Director of Graduate and Undergraduate Teacher Education, Huntington University
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This book provides the first-hand perspective of several accomplished educators on the impact of recent education reforms. Its timely analysis demonstrates the source of the motivation of thousands of parents and practitioners to challenge the rationale for high stakes testing and offers an alternative vision for a child-centered education system.
Kevin S. Casey, Executive Director, School Administrators Association of New York State
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Amid growing concerns over educational reforms that run counter to sound, evidence-based education, Polka and McKenna have exposed the dangers of complacency. They have provided a compelling argument and now urge us to step forward onto the path they have laid out to do what is right for our children. All it will take now is courage.
Shirley Lefever PhD, interim vice president and provost, Wichita State University; past president, Association of Teacher Educators (ATE)
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The authors in this book present a strong case for all of us — parents, teachers, educators, concerned citizens, and policy-makers — to stand firm in advocating for schools where every child has the opportunity to flourish rather than flounder. I really appreciate the work, the passion, and the rationale that they have created for stopping the testing madness. Let's hope it spreads.
Freddie A. Bowles Ph.D, Associate Professor of Foreign Language Education, College of Education and Health Professions, Program Director for Master of Arts in Teaching Secondary Education
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This book entails innovative and relative ideas and practices of the trends in education that are beneficial to programs all over the nation. The knowledge gained can be an asset to program modification in education.
Jennifer Young, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS., NCATE /Assessment Coordinator, Assistant Professor, Education
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Polka and McKenna unite readers in a quest for doing what is right — right for children, right for teachers, and right for our educational system. Chapter authors rally readers against one-size-fits-all assessments with logic, theory, and personal accounts of how over testing of students undermines creativity, divergent thinking, and motivation to learn. This book is a must-read for all who seek to understand the impact of No Child Left Behind, Race to the Top, and commercial assessments. It comprehensively acknowledges the significance of designing education with respect for individual differences and needs within children. This book is so interesting and reader-friendly that it captivates the reader to truly reflect about what should be the direction of education in America today!
Cathy J. Pearman, professor and department head, Reading, Foundations, and Technology, Missouri State University