Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune

Jayakar Knowledge Resource Centre

Cracking the code of education reform : creative compliance and ethical leadership / Christopher H. Tienken ; foreword by Joshua Starr, CEO of PDK International.

By: Tienken, Christopher [author.]Contributor(s): Starr, JoshuaMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Thousand Oaks, California ; London ; New Delhi : Corwin, SAGE Publications, 2020Edition: 1st edDescription: xvi, 155 p. : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781544368214 (pbk.)Subject(s): Educational leadership -- Moral and ethical aspects | School administrators -- Professional ethics -- United States | Educational change -- United States | Education and state -- United StatesDDC classification: 371.2
Contents:
Part I. Reform Critiqu -- Ethical Context of Education Reform and Compliance -- Creative Compliance -- Reframing Reform -- Part II. Reform Case Studies -- Case Study 1: Reframing Rigor -- Case Study 2: Using or Abusing Standardized Test Results -- Case Study 3: Merit Pay -- Recess of the Mind -- Promising Practice -- Final Issues -- References -- Index
Summary: "School leaders must navigate multiple education reform issues while remaining focused on the daily commitment of providing a quality education to all students. In many cases, the education reforms enacted by policy makers lack empirical support and/or result in potentially unwelcome or unethical practices, yet they are cloaked in rhetoric that makes it difficult for school leaders to accurately decipher the potential impacts on students and teachers. The lack of a practical framework from which to critique reforms such as using standardized test score to make important decisions about students and teachers, merit pay, and standardized curricula products can leave some school leaders in the position of supporting reforms that have long-term negative effects on students or educators. This book fills a void in the literature through a practical approach to (a) provide school leaders with methods they can use to interpret and critique education reforms within an action-oriented framework grounded in ethics and empirical evidence; (b) offer strategies school leaders can use to creatively comply with reforms that lack an evidence base or violate basic principles of ethics, in ways that lessen the negative aspects of education reforms at the point of contact with students; and (c) model the use of a critique framework through example cases of four empirically and ethically dubious education reforms commonly faced by K-12 school leaders. We will ask Yong Zhao to write a Foreword"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
JKRC Social Science Complex
JKRC Social Science Complex
371.2 TIE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available JKRC 19-20 SSE254
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Part I. Reform Critiqu -- Ethical Context of Education Reform and Compliance -- Creative Compliance -- Reframing Reform -- Part II. Reform Case Studies -- Case Study 1: Reframing Rigor -- Case Study 2: Using or Abusing Standardized Test Results -- Case Study 3: Merit Pay -- Recess of the Mind -- Promising Practice -- Final Issues -- References -- Index

"School leaders must navigate multiple education reform issues while remaining focused on the daily commitment of providing a quality education to all students. In many cases, the education reforms enacted by policy makers lack empirical support and/or result in potentially unwelcome or unethical practices, yet they are cloaked in rhetoric that makes it difficult for school leaders to accurately decipher the potential impacts on students and teachers. The lack of a practical framework from which to critique reforms such as using standardized test score to make important decisions about students and teachers, merit pay, and standardized curricula products can leave some school leaders in the position of supporting reforms that have long-term negative effects on students or educators. This book fills a void in the literature through a practical approach to (a) provide school leaders with methods they can use to interpret and critique education reforms within an action-oriented framework grounded in ethics and empirical evidence; (b) offer strategies school leaders can use to creatively comply with reforms that lack an evidence base or violate basic principles of ethics, in ways that lessen the negative aspects of education reforms at the point of contact with students; and (c) model the use of a critique framework through example cases of four empirically and ethically dubious education reforms commonly faced by K-12 school leaders. We will ask Yong Zhao to write a Foreword"-- Provided by publisher.

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