Innovation Up Close

Innovation Up Close How School Improvement Works - Environment, Development, and Public Policy.

1984

Hardback (30 Nov 1984)

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Publisher's Synopsis

School improvement, like motherhood, has many advocates. Everyone is for it, without having to campaign actively on its behalf. And just as the 100% of people who have had mothers think they know how mothering could be done better, so the (nearly) 100% of people who have been pupils in schools, or have even taught in or managed them, think they know how schools can be im- proved. More precisely, they are sure that schools ought to be improved. The trouble is that they propose a staggering, conflicting range of methods of improving the schools, from ;'back to the woodshed" to teacher merit pay, a stiffer curriculum, a stronger tax base, reorganization, a more humane climate, "teacher-proof" innovations, community involvement-the list is nearly end- less. Furthermore, the issues are not merely technical, but normative and po- litical. The term improvement is itself problematic. One person's version of improvement is another's version of wastefulness or even of worsening the schools. Furthermore, the versions that win out in any particular school are not Improvement sometimes turns out to be merely a necessarily technically "best. " code word for the directives that administrators have successfully put into place, or for the agreements that teachers have lobbied into being. How much do we really know about school improvement? The available research literature is quite substantial, but not as helpful as it might be.

Book information

ISBN: 9780306416934
Publisher: Springer US
Imprint: Springer
Pub date:
Edition: 1984
DEWEY: 371.207
DEWEY edition: 19
Language: English
Number of pages: 309
Weight: 1910g
Height: 240mm
Width: 160mm
Spine width: 21mm