ABSTRACT

Through conversations in honor of Dale D. Johnson, this book takes a critical view of the monoculture in curriculum and policy that has developed in education with the increase of federal funding and privatization of services for public education, and examines the shift from public interest and control to private and corporate shareholder hegemony. Most states’ educational responsibilities—assessment of constituents, curriculum development, and instructional protocols—are increasingly being outsourced to private enterprises in an effort to reduce state budgets. These enterprises have been given wide access to state resources such as public data from state-sanctioned testing results, field-testing rights to public schools, and financial assistance. Chapter authors challenge this paradigm as well as the model that has set growing premiums on accountability and performance measures. Connecting common impact between the standards movement and the privatization of education, this book lays bare the repercussions of high-stakes accountability coupled with increasing privatization.

 

Winner of The Society of Professors of Education Book Award (2018)

section I|98 pages

Challenging the Audit Culture

chapter 1|14 pages

The Sadism of School Reform

chapter 2|15 pages

Death by Numbers

The Loss of Humanity in the Age of Audit 1

chapter 4|19 pages

Disrupting U.S. Empire

Creating Subjects to Expand the “Commons” and the Public Good

chapter 5|21 pages

SCALE Down, SCALE Back!

Academic Freedom under Siege through Standards Proliferation by Para-Educational Enterprises

section II|68 pages

Contributions to Literacy and Language Development

section III|66 pages

Easing the Plight of Children

chapter 9|20 pages

“Every Day She Drunk or Gone”

Poverty, Persuasion, Peddlers and Privatization

chapter 11|12 pages

Conditions of Success for Teenage Mothers 1

Revisiting School Achievement on the Margins

chapter 12|10 pages

What’s Common in Core Curricula?

chapter 13|12 pages

Dehumanization and Violence

Symptoms from a Neoliberal City

section IV|60 pages

Challenging Education Inequity in Urban Environments

chapter 14|19 pages

The Racial Oppression of Social Justice

Inequities in Chicago Public Schools

chapter 15|19 pages

Choosing a Faculty Union over Faculty Governance in Public Education

A Case Study of a Single Teacher Certification Policy in New York

chapter 16|20 pages

The Anatomy of Dissent as Teachers Plan and Lead a Demonstration in Seattle

Intersections of Hope, Agency and Collective Action