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A Botched Attempt at Education Reform


Article # : 11632 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 9 / 1986  3,551 Words
Author : Myron Lieberman
Dr. Myron Lieberman, professor of education at the University of Pennsylvania, is the author of Beyond Public Education, a critique of the educational reform movement (Praeger Publishing, 1986).

       Educational reform reports have been a growth industry in the United States in recent years. For all practical purposes, however, these reports have ignored teacher unions. This situation changed radically, though, with the May 16 release by the Carnegie Corporation of A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the 21st Century, which in effect advocated teachers' unions running the schools.
       
        For various reasons, A Nation Prepared is devoted primarily to the development of teaching as a profession. Probably for this reason, the 14-member task force responsible for producing it included the president of the National Education Association, Mary H. Futrell, and the American Federation of Teachers, Albert Shanker. Understandably, A Nation Prepared (and therefore this critique) devotes more attention to teacher unions than previous reform reports. The attention is long overdue and should lead to a more realistic discussion of the prospects for reform.
       
        Under the heading, "A Professional Environment for Teaching," the Carnegie report recommends increasing teacher autonomy, reducing bureaucratic regulation of schools, collegial decision making in which "lead teachers" play leading roles, and add in to teacher support staffs under the direction of teachers. The report asserts that, ideally teachers should have the power to make - or "strongly influence" - decisions on the methods and instructional materials to be used, the staffing structure to be employed, the organization of the school day, the assignment of students, the consultants to be used, and the allocation of resources available to the school.
       
        Later, we read that "The education code for some states ... (2000 of 22220 Characters)
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