Some subscribers to
MathEdCC might be interested in a recent post "The Injurious
School Culture Enforced by High-Stakes Testing" [Hake (2012)].
The abstract reads:
********************************************
Abstract: Richard Flarend of the Physoc list relayed an AP press
release "Fourth-graders who flunk reading have faces marked"
at <http://usat.ly/QTRkd8> and concluded that an injurious
school culture led to this mistake. More generally an injurious
culture with consequences more serious than face marking is currently
being forced upon most U.S. schools by the high-stakes testing
mandated by NCLB.
In "Public
Defender: Diane Ravitch takes on a movement," David Denby at
<http://nyr.kr/RPfOkF> wrote (paraphrasing; supplemented by
references to Ravitch's critiques in "The New York Review of
Books"; bracketed by lines "#####. . . . "):
################################
Diane Ravitch has emerged as one of the leading opponents of the
education-reform movement. She has:
1. Written a series of scathing rebuttals of reform measures in
"The New York Review of Books":
a. "The Myth of Charter Schools"
<http://bit.ly/h0Lx8Q>;
b. "School 'Reform': A Failing
Grade"<http://bit.ly/TclFCY>;
c. "Schools We Can Envy" <http://bit.ly/QqtdTi>;
d. "How, and How Not, to Improve the Schools"
<http://bit.ly/RPBDAO>;
e. "Do Our Public Schools Threaten National Security?"
<http://bit.ly/10hxmth>;
f. "In Mitt Romney's Schoolroom"
<http://bit.ly/TcmHxS>; and
g. "Two Visions for Chicago's Schools" <http://bit.ly/SKjkeA>.
2. Written
some two thousand posts on a blog <http://dianeravitch.net/ >
she started in April, which has received almost a million and a half
page views.
3. Published "The Death and Life of the Great American School
System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education"[Ravitch
(2010a)] at <http://amzn.to/pAjeZU>.
4. Barnstormed across the country giving speeches berating the reform
movement, which, in addition to test-based "accountability,"
also supports school choice and charter schools (public institutions
that often receive substantial private funding and are free from many
regulations, such as hiring union teachers in states that require it),
and which she calls a "privatization" movement. The reform
movement has the support of President Obama and his Education
Secretary, Arne Duncan; it is also championed by the Republican Party;
by many governors, mayors, and schools chancellors; and by a variety
of wealthy entrepreneurs and fund managers, including Bill Gates, Mark
Zuckerberg, and Whitney Tilson. It has changed educational thinking in
states such as Florida, Wisconsin, and Louisiana, and in cities such
as Washington, D.C., New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago.
5. Argued that the reform movement is driven by an exaggerated
negative critique of the schools, and that it is mistakenly imposing a
free-market ethos of competition on an institution that, if it is to
function well, requires cooperation, sharing, and mentoring.
################################
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To access the
complete 10 kB post please click on <http://bit.ly/SaQB3W>.
Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
Links to Articles: <http://bit.ly/a6M5y0>
Links to Socratic Dialogue Inducing (SDI) Labs:
<http://bit.ly/9nGd3M>
Academia: <http://bit.ly/a8ixxm>
Blog: <http://bit.ly/9yGsXh>
GooglePlus: <http://bit.ly/KwZ6mE>
Twitter:
<http://bit.ly/juvd52>
REFERENCES [URL shortened by <http://bit.ly/> and accessed on 19
Nov 2012.]
Hake, R.R. 2012.
"The Injurious School Culture Enforced by High-Stakes Testing,"
online on the OPEN! AERA-L archives at
<http://bit.ly/SaQB3W>.Post of 19 Nov 2012 17:25:15-0800 to
AERA-L and Net-Gold. The abstract and link to the complete post are
being transmitted to several discussion lists and are also on my blog
"Hake'sEdStuff" at <http://bit.ly/QqZrOd> with a
provision for comments.