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Over the past three decades, the standards-based reform movement has transformed K-12 education in theUnited States, culminating with passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2002. Beyond makingreasonable accommodations for special needs students, standards-based education pays little attention toother areas of student difference, relying instead on a rational actor model of student experience, andignoring how differences in students’ backgrounds and orientations impact their particular experiences ofschooling.This book examines the development of standards-based education, with particular scrutiny of the roles ofthe National Governors’ Association and its National Education Summit events. Examination of importantdocuments emerging from those events provides an illustration of the conceptually impoverishedunderstanding of student subjectivity, motivation, and agency inherent in standards-based education. In order to understand both problems with andalternatives to standards-based education, the author examines the roles of ideology, rhetoric, and audience in school policy.In three case studies, the author analyzes several non-school models of education, including Marine Corps bootcamp, Ving Tsun kung fu training, andan online, school resistance community. Johnson argues that examination of these learning contexts provides a better understanding of theshortcomings and dangers of the standards-based model of student subjectivity, and suggests a set of fourteen principles to inform the development ofmore student-centered alternatives.
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Over the past three decades, the standards-based reform movement has transformed K-12 education in theUnited States, culminating with passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2002. Beyond makingreasonable accommodations for special needs students, standards-based education pays little attention toother areas of student difference, relying instead on a rational actor model of student experience, andignoring how differences in students’ backgrounds and orientations impact their particular experiences ofschooling.This book examines the development of standards-based education, with particular scrutiny of the roles ofthe National Governors’ Association and its National Education Summit events. Examination of importantdocuments emerging from those events provides an illustration of the conceptually impoverishedunderstanding of student subjectivity, motivation, and agency inherent in standards-based education. In order to understand both problems with andalternatives to standards-based education, the author examines the roles of ideology, rhetoric, and audience in school policy.In three case studies, the author analyzes several non-school models of education, including Marine Corps bootcamp, Ving Tsun kung fu training, andan online, school resistance community. Johnson argues that examination of these learning contexts provides a better understanding of theshortcomings and dangers of the standards-based model of student subjectivity, and suggests a set of fourteen principles to inform the development ofmore student-centered alternatives.