1st Edition

A Nation at Risk A 20-year Reappraisal. A Special Issue of the peabody Journal of Education

    182 Pages
    by Routledge

    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    This special issue examines the underlying assumptions of the "A Nation At Risk" report, the context within which the Commission's work was situated, and the effects of the report in improving teaching and learning, as well as the performance of the public educational system. The purpose is to address three broad questions: Was America's education system really putting the nation at risk in the early 1980s? What is the legacy of "A Nation At Risk"? Given our current knowledge on education and human development, the report's overall concern is restated: What risks and opportunities lay before the nation today, and how will they affect the notion of a "learning society" and our public education system? Taken as a whole, the seven articles address the three broad issues identified regarding the past, current, and future of educational reform in the United States.

    Volume 79, Number 1, 2003. Contents: K.K. Wong, J.W. Guthrie, D.N. Harris, Editors' Preface. J.W. Guthrie, M.G. Springer, A Nation at Risk Revisited: Did "Wrong" Reasoning Result in "Right" Results?: At What Costs? D.N. Harris, M.J. Handel, L. Mishel, Education and the Economy Revisited: How Schools Matter. J.P. Viteritti, From Excellence to Equity: Observations on Politics, History, and Policy. K.K. Wong, A.C. Nicotera, Educational Quality and Policy Redesign: Reconsidering the NAR and Federal Title I Policy. T.M. Smith, Curricular Reform in Mathematics and Science Since A Nation at Risk. M. Berends, In the Wake of A Nation at Risk: New American Schools' Private Sector School Reform Initiative. T.C. Caboni, M. Adisu, A Nation at Risk After Twenty Years: Continuing Implications for Higher Education.

    Biography

    Douglas N. Harris, Kenneth K. Wong, James W. Guthrie