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Educational Accountability in an Era of Global Decentralization William G. Huitt Valdosta State University Last Revised: April 2006
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Movement to the Industrial Age
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Importance of Schooling Preparing a educated citizenship has never been more important 20 th century economy –Agriculture-based –Industrial-based –Information-based
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Schooling to the Industrial Age Standardization (interchangeable parts) –Outcomes (effectiveness) –Process (efficiency) Leadership (new opportunities) Management (established opportunities)
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Schooling to the Industrial Age Standardization (interchangeable parts) –Outcomes (effectiveness) –Process (efficiency) Exemplified in Carnegie units & standardized testing Leadership gave way to management
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Schooling in the Industrial Age High school graduation –10% in 1900 –75% in 1975 Accompanied by substantial increases in productivity
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Adoption of the Automobile Source: Alexander, M. (2001). The innovation wave and secular market trends. Retrieved November 2004, from http://www.safehaven.com/article-71.htm
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Information-Age Megatrends Importance of technology –Computers –Internet Speed of change Global economy Customized economy Decentralization Decreased importance of manufacturing Increased importance of distribution
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Decentralizaton Important decisions made at level of implementation –Standards –Curricula –Evaluation Adopt prepared or develop own Schools must demonstrate value-added Outside agencies audit performance
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Customized Economy Consumers select product or service that best meet their needs Who is/are the consumer(s) of schooling? –Students –Parents –Society Making good choices requires reliable and valid data
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Rapid Rate of Change Requires change in goals and activities Must simultaneously maintain or renegotiate values and principles
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School Choice School choice is increasingly becoming an option for parents and students –By 2003, 25% of K-12 students in the US were not attending neighborhood public school –Neighborhood public school attendance decreased 7.5% in 10 years
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School Choice Use of vouchers declining Private schools (2001) –29,273 schools –5.3 million students Homeschooling (2003) –1.1 million students Together accounted for 13% of school- aged children
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School Choice Magnet schools (2001) –1,736 total schools; ~ 1.4 million students –Decline from 2400 schools and 3200 programs within schools in 1992 –Over 25 themes Business and finance Ecology and the environment Justice and the law Travel and tourism
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School Choice Magnet schools (2001) –11 of 100 largest school districts have more than 20% of students attending magnet school –3 have more than 40%
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School Choice Charter schools (2004) –2,996 total schools –~700,000 students; 37 states –28% increase from 1997 –73% in 10 states Arizona California Colorado Florida Michigan Ohio Pennsylvania North Carolina Texas Wisconsin
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School Choice Magnet and Charter Schools –~ 4% of total enrollment Open enrollment –32 states enacted legislation –~ 4 million students; 8% of total enrollment
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Accountability Accountability has always been a major challenge Four major methods of accountability –Bureaucratic –Professional –Performance –Market
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Accountability Bureaucratic and Professional dominated school accountability systems throughout the 20 th century High school graduate rates increased –10% in 1900 –70% in 1975 –74% in 2003
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Accountability Movement to information-age –Decentralization –Customized economy –Rapid rate of change Increased emphasis on –Performance –Choice/Market
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Accountability Every school needs to have –Philosophy and identified values –Vision and mission statements –Curricula and performance standards Minimum, passing National, proficient Global, world class
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Accountability Every school needs to have –Identified learning and developmental theories, methods of instruction, lesson plans, etc. –Formative/process assessment Educators Students –Summative/product assessment Qualitative Quantitative
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Accountability Every school needs to have –Staff training and development –Records of Financial transactions Training and certifications of professional and non- professional staff –Method of communication with students, parents, agencies
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New Opportunities Develop simple, workable approaches to strategic planning –Philosophy –Vision –Mission –Values Use technology as appropriate
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New Opportunities Develop simple, technology-based approaches to developing and sharing –Curriculum standards –Performance standards –Processes of assessment and evaluation –Producing annual reports –Communicating with students, parents, and other stakeholders
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Summary Diversity and choice will continue to grow Federal and state agencies should facilitate development –Curricula –Pedagogy –Accountability systems –Means of communication and networking
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Summary Diversity and choice will continue to grow Teacher training institutions should facilitate –Educator training to implement different curricula –Communication and networking within their geographical area
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Summary People take different roads seeking fulfillment and happiness. Just because they’re not on your road doesn’t mean they’ve gotten lost. H. Jackson Brown, Jr. Life’s Little Instruction Book
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Make A Great Day!
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