It's the Classroom, Stupid by Hettleman Kalman R.;
Author:Hettleman, Kalman R.;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: R&L Education
Published: 2010-08-15T00:00:00+00:00
THE ABCâS OF R&D
To paraphrase Mark Twainâs quip about quitting smoking, itâs easy to reform education: weâve done it a thousand times. But we havenât gotten it right, and while there are many reasons and many wrongdoers, a paramount reason is the deplorable state of education R&D. R&D is taken for granted in medicine, science, technology, engineering, industry, and other fields. But it is largely absent in public education, and its absence hinders almost every step towards school reform.
The good news is that R&D doesnât arouse the partisanship that plagues other school policy debates. Even diehard local-control liberals and conservatives agree that it must be a federal responsibility and upgraded. The bad news is that R&D draws yawns from the public, political officials, and, most tellingly, the education establishment. Itâs been woefully neglected, and research functions under the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) have been historically inept. But itâs a critical necessity for school reform, and its status and science must change as a pillar of the New Education Federalism.
Lack of Rigor and Relevance
Two decades ago, the Consortium on Productivity in the Schoolsâa nonpartisan panel that included business leaders, economists, systems analysts, and educatorsâfound that the âeducation sector is heavily politicized in part because . . . [t]he system suffers from too much scattered and unevaluated change.â43 The Consortium quoted one observer: âA grocery shopper can find out more from a label on a box of cereal than an educator . . . can about a set of educational toolsâtextbooks, activity guides, computer programs, films, etc.âthat cost millions of dollars to develop and market.â44 RAND Corporation analysts found that, unlike research conducted by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), education R&D âhas almost no scientifically structured clinical trials, has relatively few major longitudinal surveys, and has no equivalents of teaching hospitals or schools of public health that combine research with practice.â45
Rigor is lacking and subject to controversy. How much should education R&D rely on the scientific âgold standardâ of randomized trials, common in medicine research in which patients are randomly assigned to treatment or control groups? Many experts think thatâs the way to go in education research. NCLB leans in that direction. And its proponents include Grover âRussâ Whitehurst, director of DOEâs research Institute for Education Sciences from its creation in 2002 through 2008.
But others contend that randomized trials are difficult, expensive, and not much superior to other methods. The executive director of the National Research Council cautions that the quest should be for R&D that produces âreasonably good solutions to inordinately complex and dynamic problems (emphasis in the original).â46 The problems involve difficulties in isolating and measuring innumerable variables like teacher adherence to the research design and funding.47
Another major complication is how to bridge the gulf between research scientists and school practitioners. The âivory towerâ syndrome is worse in education than in other fields, as the National Research Council has underscored. In 2005 the Council spearheaded the creation of a new organization, the Strategic Education Research Partnership Institute (SERP).
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Art of Coaching Workbook by Elena Aguilar(50602)
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh(21313)
Twilight of the Idols With the Antichrist and Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche(18416)
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell(8923)
Periodization Training for Sports by Tudor Bompa(8053)
Change Your Questions, Change Your Life by Marilee Adams(7520)
This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz(6640)
Asking the Right Questions: A Guide to Critical Thinking by M. Neil Browne & Stuart M. Keeley(5538)
Grit by Angela Duckworth(5418)
Red Sparrow by Jason Matthews(5296)
Paper Towns by Green John(4960)
Room 212 by Kate Stewart(4904)
Ken Follett - World without end by Ken Follett(4555)
Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson(4195)
The Sports Rules Book by Human Kinetics(4180)
Papillon (English) by Henri Charrière(4089)
Double Down (Diary of a Wimpy Kid Book 11) by Jeff Kinney(4078)
The Motorcycle Diaries by Ernesto Che Guevara(3899)
Exercise Technique Manual for Resistance Training by National Strength & Conditioning Association(3879)
