Abstracts
Complexity, Accountability, and School Improvement
:
[PDF available]
Jennifer A. O'Day
Diversity and Higher Education
:
Theory and Impact on Educational Outcomes [PDF available]
Patricia Gurin, Eric L. Dey, Sylvia Hurtado, and Gerald Gurin
Democracy and Education
:
The Missing Link May Be Ours [PDF available]
John Willinsky
Book Notes
Why Don’t They Learn English?
By Lucy Tse
Overlooked and Underserved
By Jorge Ruiz-de-Velasco, Michael Fix, and Beatriz Chu Clewell
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Complexity, Accountability, and School Improvement :
[PDF available]
In this article, Jennifer O'Day builds on her earlier work defining and examining the standards-based reform movement in the United States. Here, O'Day explores accountability mechanisms currently associated with standards-based reform efforts that "take the school as the unit of accountability and seek to improve student learning by improving the functioning of the school organization." She examines such accountability mechanisms using the theoretical framework of complexity theory and focuses on how information travels through complex systems, with the understanding that information, its existence and usage, is key to improving schools. Drawing on work conducted with researchers at the Consortium for Policy Research in Education (CPRE), she contrasts the Chicago Public Schools' outcomes-based bureaucratic accountability approach with the combination of administrative and professional accountability found in the Baltimore City Schools. She argues that the combination of administrative and professional accountability presents a much more promising approach for implementing lasting and meaningful school reform. (pp. 293-329)
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