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[DOWNLOAD] "Ethnic-Based Equity in Teacher Judgment of Student Achievement on a Language and Literacy Curriculum-Embedded Performance Assessment for Children in Grade One (Report)" by Educational Foundations ~ Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Ethnic-Based Equity in Teacher Judgment of Student Achievement on a Language and Literacy Curriculum-Embedded Performance Assessment for Children in Grade One (Report)

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eBook details

  • Title: Ethnic-Based Equity in Teacher Judgment of Student Achievement on a Language and Literacy Curriculum-Embedded Performance Assessment for Children in Grade One (Report)
  • Author : Educational Foundations
  • Release Date : January 01, 2008
  • Genre: Education,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 255 KB

Description

In today's American educational system, testing has increasingly become the preferred educational practice for measuring students' academic achievement. It is often seen as the most suitable means to raise academic achievement for students, by insisting on educational accountability among educators--teachers, school counselors, and administrators (Moore, 2003). Given the steady decline of school achievement among students in the United States, greater interest in public education now exists. Such interest extends beyond the walls of professional educators, district and building administrators, local school boards, and state education departments. Increasingly, business and political leaders are involving themselves in educational policy, in turn, to improve school achievement in America's public schools (Usdan, 2006). These leaders' involvement in public education evolved out of their concern that the United States may no longer be producing students who are able to compete in today's global economy (Friedman, 2005). Because public education is commonly seen as the "driving force" of the country's economic prosperity, public education is an important topic of debate (Moore, 2003; Southern Education Foundation, 1995, 1999, 2000a, 2000b), and desperate measures are frequently offered to improve public education for all students (Moore, 2003), especially low-income students, students with disabilities, and students of color. Too often, students with these particular backgrounds find themselves in failing schools or educational systems that do not give them the skills needed to succeed in the "new" global workplace (Kozol, 1991; Sears, 2002). There are a number of variables that interact to impede school outcomes for these students. They range from chronic poverty, low teacher expectations, poor parental involvement, and inadequate school funding and resources (Flowers, Milner, & Moore, 2003; Ford & Moore, 2004; Kozol, 1991; Sears, 2002). Nevertheless, based on national statistics, it is quite clear that these students are being left behind in these schools, and society offers them few assurances that they will be able to compete in today's global economy. Therefore, the demands from business and political leaders to educators--teachers, school counselors, and administrators--to leave no child or group behind are seen as warranted. It is increasingly apparent, at least from these leaders, that public schools will not be able to reform themselves without assistance or force from outside entities (Usdan, 2006). This belief, of course, mirrors earlier calls for action to improve the quality of education in the United States (Cobia & Henderson, 2007).


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