Why National Standards and Tests?
Politics and the Quest for Better Schools
- John F. Jennings - Center on Education Policy, Washington DC
Other Titles in:
Evaluation (General)
Evaluation (General)
April 1998 | 216 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
The common view today is that state schools are not good enough, and that something must be done to make them better. Setting academic standards is one way to raise the educational achievment of students. John F Jennings gives readers a behind-the-scenes look at how congress and the Executive Branch have wrestled with this issue, and reviews the major debates about whether or not there should be testable national standards for all American schools.
The Need to Improve the Schools
Origins of National Standards and Tests
The 1992 Presidential Campaign and the Transition to a New Administration
Goals 2000 in the US House of Representatives
Goals 2000 in the Senate and the Conference Committee
The Elementary and Secondary Education Act
The Conservative Assault on Raising Standards to Improve the Schools
The Elections of 1996 and Clinton's Second Term