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The Ordeal of Equality: Did Federal Regulation Fix the Schools?

Item

Title
The Ordeal of Equality: Did Federal Regulation Fix the Schools?
Abstract/Description
American schools have always been locally created and controlled. But ever since the Title I program in 1965 appropriated nearly one billion dollars for public schools, federal money and programs have been influencing every school in America. What has been accomplished in this extraordinary assertion of federal influence? What hasn't? Why not? With incisive clarity and wit, David Cohen and Susan Moffitt argue that enormous gaps existed between policies and programs, and the real-world practices that they attempted to change. Learning and teaching are complicated and mysterious. So the means to achieve admirable goals are uncertain, and difficult to develop and sustain, particularly when teachers get little help to cope with the blizzard of new programs, new slogans, new tests, and new rules. Ironically, as the authors observe, the least experienced and least well-trained teachers are often in the most needy schools, so federal support is compromised by the inequality it is intended to ameliorate. If new policies and programs don't include means to create the capability they require, they cannot succeed. We don't know what we need to enable states, school systems, schools, teachers, and students to use the resources that programs offer. The trouble with standards-based reform is that standards and tests still don't teach you how to teach.
Date
February 2010
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Resource type
en
Medium
en Print
Background/context type
en Conceptual
en Policy
en Historical
Open access/free-text available
en No
Language
en
ISBN
978-0-674-05364-9
Citation
Cohen, D. K., & Moffitt, S. L. (2010). The Ordeal of Equality: Did Federal Regulation Fix the Schools? Harvard University Press.

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