31,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
16 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Across the country, education leaders and policy makers at every level are directing an increasingly bright light at the problem of chronically underperforming schools. The sheer number of failing schools facing takeover and restructuring is unprecedented. This crisis is rapidly becoming the leading concern of the accountability movement. Improving Struggling Schools draws on a blend of case studies and the emerging body of research on failing schools to identify patterns in the challenges they face. Arguing that school improvement is a developmental process, Stephens outlines a new approach…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Across the country, education leaders and policy makers at every level are directing an increasingly bright light at the problem of chronically underperforming schools. The sheer number of failing schools facing takeover and restructuring is unprecedented. This crisis is rapidly becoming the leading concern of the accountability movement. Improving Struggling Schools draws on a blend of case studies and the emerging body of research on failing schools to identify patterns in the challenges they face. Arguing that school improvement is a developmental process, Stephens outlines a new approach that takes into account the patterns of growth and change in troubled schools, the central dilemmas schools face as they navigate this trajectory, and the overarching need to transcend the isolation and confusion that so often thwart schools' efforts to move forward. "With this book, Brent Stephens gives new meaning to the term 'reflective practitioner.' An accomplished educational leader himself, he gives us a highly nuanced, well-researched, and disciplined view of the hard work of school improvement. Improving Struggling Schools is a much-needed corrective to conventional, simplistic 'turnaround' views of school improvement." -- Richard F. Elmore, Gregory Anrig Professor of Educational Leadership, Harvard Graduate School of Education "State education agencies charged with 'turning around' struggling schools need to confront the reality of school improvement planning richly detailed in these case studies. We have rarely examined, as Stephens has here, the 'powerful allure and...drag' of the compliance-focused response that most state intervention practices provoke. This has to change. Stephens points to a promising new direction for our work. -- Karla Brooks Baehr, Deputy Commissioner for Accountability, Assistance, and Partnership, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education "Stephens brings a profound, almost novelistic empathy to the experience of schools struggling with dilemmas of instructional improvement. He unites this empathy, the product of years in the classroom, with a truly lucid understanding of how larger policy and implementation frames interact with the micropolitics and unique cultures of people in schools. I recommend this book to anyone interested in the next phase of educational reform." -- Andrés A. Alonso, CEO, Baltimore City Public Schools "Stephens defines the next level of work in school improvement and accountability in hopeful and tangible terms. For all believers in excellent education for all, this book elucidates the path from vision to reality." -- Brian G. Osborne, superintendent, School District of South Orange and Maplewood, New Jersey D. Brent Stephens is currently the principal of Anthony Ochoa Middle School in Hayward, California. He has also served as a K-8 principal in Somerville, Massachusetts; as a central office administrator in Lowell, Massachusetts; and as a Spanish bilingual teacher in Boston and Oakland, California. He holds a doctorate from the Urban Superintendents Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and has earned certification by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.
Autorenporträt
D. Brent Stephens is currently the principal of Anthony Ochoa Middle School in Hayward, California. He has also served as a K-8 principal in Somerville, Massachusetts; as a central office administrator in Lowell, Massachusetts; and as a Spanish bilingual teacher in Boston and Oakland, California. He holds a doctorate from the Urban Superintendents Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and has earned certification by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.