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Impact of the internet age on human culture and K-20 education policy/administration
Curated by Jim Lerman
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Failing the Test: Why Cheating Scandals and Parent Rebellions Are Erupting in NYC, DC, and Atlanta ~ Slate

Failing the Test: Why Cheating Scandals and Parent Rebellions Are Erupting in NYC, DC, and Atlanta ~ Slate | :: The 4th Era :: | Scoop.it

by David L. Kirp


"It’s a terrible time for advocates of market-driven reform in public education. For more than a decade, their strategy—which makes teachers’ careers turn on student gains in reading and math tests, and promotes competition through charter schools and vouchers—has been the dominant policy mantra. But now the cracks are showing. That’s a good thing because this isn’t a proven—or even a promising—way to make schools better.


"Here’s a litany of recent setbacks: In the latest Los Angeles school board election, a candidate who dared to question the overreliance on test results in evaluating teachers and the unseemly rush to approve charter schools won despite $4 million amassed to defeat him, including $1 million from New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and $250,000 from Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. Former Atlanta superintendent Beverly Hall, feted for boosting her students’ test scores at all costs, has been indicted in a massive cheating scandal. Michelle Rhee, the former Washington D.C. school chief who is the darling of the accountability crowd, faces accusations, based on a memo released by veteran PBS correspondent John Merrow, that she knew about, and did nothing to stop, widespread cheating. In a Washington Post op-ed, Bill Gates, who has spent hundreds of millions of dollars promoting high-stakes, test-driven teacher evaluation, did an about-face and urged a kinder, gentler approach that teachers could embrace. And parents in New York State staged a rebellion, telling their kids not to take a new and untested achievement exam."

Jim Lerman's insight:

This hardly qualifies as hard-nosed social science research, however Kirp's article does provide ample documentation (and good links) of what he terms, "The cracks are showing,"

AnnC's curator insight, September 7, 2013 1:36 PM

how do we improve education?

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The world’s most famous teacher blasts school reform ~ Washington Post

The world’s most famous teacher blasts school reform ~ Washington Post | :: The 4th Era :: | Scoop.it

by Valerie Strauss

 

"The most famous teacher in the world is not a fan of high-stakes standardized tests,  Teach For America or the Common Core State Standards. But he loves teaching and teachers, and he has written a new book giving advice to colleagues at all stages of their careers.

 

"He is fifth-grade teacher Rafe Esquith of Room 56 at Hobart Elementary School in Los Angeles. I feel comfortable calling him the world’s most famous teacher given the following about the father of four and grandfather of two, who has taught at Hobart  for nearly 30 years and written several best-selling books:"

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