Beyond test scores : a better way to measure school quality / Jack Schneider.
2017
LA217.2 .S34 2017 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Beyond test scores : a better way to measure school quality / Jack Schneider.
ISBN
9780674976399 (hardcover)
0674976398 (hardcover)
0674976398 (hardcover)
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2017.
Language
English
Description
326 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Call Number
LA217.2 .S34 2017
Dewey Decimal Classification
370.11
Summary
What makes a school a "good" school? It's hard to say, and our current methods of measuring school quality are crude and often misleading. Parents who face the problem of where to matriculate their children are often left to surf websites that only offer one or two metrics by which to measure school accomplishment. Or they ask around among neighbors, work colleagues, and so on; the problem, of course, is that nearly everyone thinks the school their children attend is a "good" school. Lawmakers and education reformers review spreadsheets containing data that only confirm what we already know: high average test scores, the metric most often used to indicate school quality, are merely a reflection of the socioeconomic status of students who attend the school. But which schools improve scores the most? Which are best at protecting kids from bullying and harassment? Which schools are best at science, at the arts? Which schools are best at preparing underserved groups for college and the job market? None of the metrics for school quality that are currently widely available are helpful at answering these questions. Schneider led a team of researchers who asked people what they thought made for a good school. The answers they provided sometimes aligned with the measures policymakers and researchers have deemed important--and sometimes not. Then they set out to design a new system for measuring school quality that would allow Americans to figure out which schools were good at doing what and how to hold schools accountable for improving outcomes.-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-314) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Introduction
Wrong answer: standardized tests and their limitations
Through a glass darkly: how parents and policymakers gauge school quality
What really matters: a new framework for school quality
But how do we get that kind of information? making use of new tools
An information superhighway: making data usable
A new accountability: making data matter
Conclusion
Postscript.
Wrong answer: standardized tests and their limitations
Through a glass darkly: how parents and policymakers gauge school quality
What really matters: a new framework for school quality
But how do we get that kind of information? making use of new tools
An information superhighway: making data usable
A new accountability: making data matter
Conclusion
Postscript.