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Why the Standards Movement Failed: An Educational and Political Diagnosis of Its Failure and the Implications for School Reform
Author(s) -
Lawrence C. Stedman
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
open collections
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1920-4175
DOI - 10.14288/ce.v2i1.182313
Subject(s) - reform movement , accountability , graduation (instrument) , politics , audit , academic standards , academic achievement , progressive education , standardized test , authoritarianism , test (biology) , education reform , movement (music) , educational assessment , sociology , political science , public administration , political economy , pedagogy , democracy , psychology , mathematics education , law , higher education , primary education , economics , engineering , management , paleontology , biology , philosophy , aesthetics , mechanical engineering
In the first paper, “How Well Does the Standards Movement Measure Up?,” I documented the movement’s failure in diverse areas—academic achievement, equality of opportunity, quality of learning, and graduation rates—and described its harmful effects on students and school culture. In this paper, I diagnose the reasons for the failure and propose an alternative agenda for school reform. I link the failure of the standards movement to its faulty premises, historical myopia, and embrace of test-driven accountability. As part of the audit culture and the conservative restoration, the movement ended up pushing a data-driven, authoritarian form of schooling. Its advocates blamed educational problems on a retreat from standards, for which there was little evidence, while ignoring the long-standing, deep structure of schooling that had caused persistent achievement problems throughout the 20 th century. Drawing on reproduction theories and analyses of the neoliberal reform project, I make the case for repealing NCLB and Race to the Top and outline a progressive framework for reconstructing schools.

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