Thursday, October 11, 2007

Ed Policy Research Unit: High School Reform is Off Course

When I first got the press release for this report, I never imagined it would get any coverage by news organizations. It definitely goes against the conventional wisdom, which is one reason you ought to read it.

Click here to read the report from the Educational Policy Research Unit at Arizona State University.

Click here to read Education Week's report about the report. If you want to get a glimpse of what it says, here are the first couple of paragraphs:

In a new paperRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader arguing that the ongoing national push to dramatically improve American high schools has gotten off course, two University of California education professors take aim at what they see as an overemphasis on states’ adoption of higher standards for graduation and more-rigorous tests.

“The push to enhance rigor and standards behind the high school diploma is seriously flawed,” write W. Norton Grubb, an education professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Jeannie Oakes, an education professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, in the paper. “Any gains come at the expense of other goals for high school reform, including equity, curricular relevance, and student interest.”

The paper argues that discussions of “rigor” too often use a narrow definition that neglects higher-order-thinking skills, applications of learning in unfamiliar settings, and academic depth in favor of breadth.

And many proponents of higher standards and rigorous tests, the authors contend, have little to say about how their imposition will enhance student performance generally. The authors say many urban high schools simply lack the capacity to meet the standards.

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