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High Stakes
Poverty, Testing, and Failure in American Schools
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High Stakes
Poverty, Testing, and Failure in American Schools
- Textbook
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Description
High Stakes brings the voices of students and teachers to our national debates over school accountability and educational reform. Recounting the experiences of two classrooms during one academic year, the book offers a critical exploration of excessive state-mandated monitoring, high-stakes testing pressures, and inequities in public school funding that impede the instructional work of teachers, especially those who serve children of poorer families.
Redbud Elementary has no playground, no library, no hot water, and no art classes. Ninety-five percent of the children qualify for a free breakfast or lunch. Most of the children live with a single parent or relative; some live in homes without electricity, running water, or floors.
The authors, who moved from comfortable college professor positions to teach in a poor school district, offer an eye-opening examination of the daily school lives of children who live in crushing poverty and teachers who work under extraordinary stress. Their tale is at times heartbreaking, heartwarming, or infuriating. They explain why many recent educational reforms are off track and argue for more meaningful reforms that can empower teachers and students and better meet the challenges of our communities and the national interest.
This second edition updates the story of Redbud Elementary and takes a hard look at the national expansion of accountability from preschool through college. A new final chapter focuses on the national effects of the No Child Left Behind Act as well as states' experiences with mandates and the role of big business in the testing process. This edition concludes with coverage of the so-called silent professionals and opposition to high-stakes testing, and a consideration of the future prospects for American education.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 September: The Children We Teach
Chapter 3 October: Regulating Teaching
Chapter 4 November: Drugs, Poverty, and Test Scores
Chapter 5 December: "Clamp Down"
Chapter 6 January: Test Preparation-The Pace Quickens
Chapter 7 February: Pep Rallies for Tests
Chapter 8 March: Test-Day Traumas
Chapter 9 April: Freedom to Teach and Learn
Chapter 10 May: "I Don't Want to Spend My Time on Paperwork"
Chapter 11 How Can We Build a Better Future? Recommendations for Policy Change
Chapter 12 Today a Nation of Testing
Chapter 13 Epilogue
Product details
Published | Oct 13 2005 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 2nd |
Extent | 240 |
ISBN | 9781461637301 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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I know of no other book that so clearly shows how our fascination with testing, standards, and accountability fails miserably to deal with the daily realities of education and poverty in this country. High States provides a richly detailed picture of these realities and deserves to be read by anyone concerned with the educational lives of poor children.
Michael W. Apple, John Bascom Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Educational Policy Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison; author,
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High Stakes represents the moral compass for school improvement that has been missing in the accountability discourse. High Stakes should be required reading for policy makers bent on equating school improvement with accountability measures.
Journal of Anthropological Research
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A critical, passionate, firsthand account....The authors challenge the effectiveness of using standardized tests to make decisions in a school that lacks basic amenities and suffers from excessive student and teacher stress.
Library Journal
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High Stakes is a poignant look at the reality of public schools today.
The Louisiana Weekly
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...an excellent first hand account of the impact of testing ...could inspire teachers, administrators, and parents not just to accept the message of those who advocate for high stakes testing and not to feel powerless.
Dr. Liz Keefe, University of New Mexico
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A book so compelling that it just might become a classic.
American School Board Journal