Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum: How Ideology Trumped Evidence / Edition 1

Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum: How Ideology Trumped Evidence / Edition 1

by Richard L Allington
ISBN-10:
0325005133
ISBN-13:
9780325005133
Pub. Date:
09/05/2002
Publisher:
Heinemann
ISBN-10:
0325005133
ISBN-13:
9780325005133
Pub. Date:
09/05/2002
Publisher:
Heinemann
Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum: How Ideology Trumped Evidence / Edition 1

Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum: How Ideology Trumped Evidence / Edition 1

by Richard L Allington

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Overview

New legislation will transform American public education. Basic to the No Child Left Behind Act and the Put Reading First program is a new and substantial federal intrusion into local curriculum control and teacher autonomy. This intrusion is masked in the legislative mandate for "evidence-based", or "scientific", reading instruction. Beyond the distortions of the findings of the National Reading Panel Report that undergird the new federal initiatives, there are other federal mandates, past and current, that have also impeded improving reading instruction—and worse, the public education system—through privatization, teacher disempowerment, and a systemic business model.

In this timely and important book, nationally-recognized reading researcher Richard Allington tracks and questions the 30-year campaign that has focused on testing, accountability, and federalization of education. He and other educators, including Jim Cunningham, Michael Pressley, Elaine Garan, and Patrick Shannon, have contributed articles that provide an overview of past and recent federal education policies, including the NRP Report and associated legislation and policy making, with analyses of the premises of the new national reading plan. By showing how these premises are manufactured—that is, not reliably supported by the research—they explain why this plan is an unwarranted federal encroachment into local educational decision making.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780325005133
Publisher: Heinemann
Publication date: 09/05/2002
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.63(d)
Age Range: 5 - 10 Years

About the Author

Richard Allington is coauthor of No More Summer-Reading Loss, part of Heinemann's Not This But That series as well as editor of Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum.



Dick is a professor of literacy studies at the University of Tennessee. He is a past-president of the International Reading Association and the Literacy Research Association. Dick and Anne McGill-Franzen were awarded the Albert J. Harris Award for their study of ameliorating summer reading loss. Together they co-edited the Handbook of Reading Disability Research and Summer Reading:Closing the Rich/Poor Reading Achievement Gap.



He was previously the Irving and Rose Fien Professor of Education at the University of Florida. Dick is a member of the Reading Hall of Fame and the recipient of numerous awards for his contributions to understanding reading difficulties. He is the author/coauthor of several books, including What Really Matters for Struggling Readers: Designing Research-based Programs.

Table of Contents

Contents:
Introduction: Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum
1. Troubling Times: A Short Historical Perspective, R. Allington
I. Unreliable Evidence: Responses to the National Reading Panel Reports
2. The National Reading Panel Report [A Review], J. Cunningham
3. Why the National Reading Panel's Recommendations Are Not Enough, M. Pressley, S. Dolezal, A. Roehrig, & K. Hilden
4. Beyond the Smoke and Mirrors: A Critique of the National Reading Panel Report on Phonics, E. Garan
5. More Smoke and Mirrors: A Critique of the National Reading Panel Report on Fluency, S. Krashen
6. Babes in the Woods: The Wanderings of the National Reading Panel, J. Yatvin
7. Can Teachers and Policy Makers Learn to Talk to One Another? C. Toll
II. Politics, Policies, and Profits: The Political Context of the National Reports
8. The Politics of Phonics, F. Paterson
9. Decodable Text in Beginning Reading: Are Mandates Based on Research? R. Allington & H. Woodside-Jiron
10. Explicit and Systematic Teaching of Reading—A New Slogan? B. Cambourne
11. The Will of the People, J. Edmondson & P. Shannon
Conclusion: An Unwanted Intrusion: The Evidence Against the National Reading Plan
12. Accelerating in the Wrong Direction: Why Thirty Years of Federal Testing and Accountability Haven't Worked Yet and What We Might Do Instead, R. Allington
13. Why We Don't Need a National Methodology, R. Allington

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