ABSTRACT

Accountability, in the form of standardized test scores, is built into many government literacy policies, with severe consequences for schools and districts that fail to meet ever-increasing performance levels. The key question this book addresses is whose knowledge is considered in framing government literacy policies? The intent is to raise awareness of the degree to which expertise is being ignored on a worldwide level and pseudo-science is becoming the basis for literacy policies and laws. The authors, all leading researchers from the U.S., U.K., Scotland, France, and Germany, have a wide range of views but share in common a deep concern about the lack of respect for knowledge among policy makers. Each author comes to the common subject of this volume from the vantage point of his or her major interests, ranging from an exposition of what should be the best knowledge utilized in an aspect of literacy education policy, to how political decisions are impacting literacy policy, to laying out the history of events in their own country. Collectively they offer a critical analysis of the condition of literacy education past and present and suggest alternative courses of action for the future.

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction—Knowledge, Evidence, and Faith

How the Federal Government Used Science to Take Over Public Schools

part 1|91 pages

The Political Realties

chapter 2|16 pages

Whose Knowledge Counts?

The Pedagogy of the Absurd

chapter 5|12 pages

Flying Blind

Government Policy on the Teaching of Reading in England and Research on Effective Literacy Education

chapter 6|15 pages

Whose Knowledge Counts, for Whom, in What Circumstances?

The Ethical Constraints on Who Decides

part 2|96 pages

Aspects of Literacy

chapter 9|11 pages

The Staircase Curriculum

Whole-school Collaboration to Improve Literacy Achievement

chapter 10|5 pages

Diversity in Children's Literature

What Does It Matter in Today's Educational Climate?

chapter 11|17 pages

Examining Three Assumptions About Text Complexity

Standard 10 of the Common Core State Standards

chapter 13|11 pages

Writing Teachers

The Roles Exploration, Evaluation, and Time Play in Their Lives