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The Policy Context of United States Educational Innovation and Improvement

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The Policy Context of United States Educational Innovation and Improvement

Abstract/Description

The purpose of this contribution to Oxford Bibliographies in Education is to establish context for the series of articles on improvement-focused educational research, a developing field aimed at producing and using knowledge to address problems, needs, and opportunities grounded deeply in practice contexts. This article frames the policy context of educational innovation and improvement in the United States from which improvement-focused educational research has emerged and in which it is currently developing. We conceptualize “policy” broadly as initiatives and movements that aim to drive the agenda for (and pursuit of) educational innovation as advanced both (a) within and by branches and agencies of government and (b) outside of government, by philanthropies, non-profit organizations, associations, and interest groups. We focus specifically on federal and national policy initiatives since the 1950s that have shared the central priorities of improvement-focused educational research: i.e., effecting innovation and improvement in instructional practice, its organization, and its management, with the primary goals of improving quality and reducing disparities in students’ educational experiences and outcomes. This is for three reasons: (1) the 1950s mark a pivot in societal ambitions for public education in the United States, beyond universal access to public schools to excellence and equity in students’ educational experiences and outcomes; (2) the 1950s mark the beginning of a decades-long period of increasing federal engagement in public education, with a central focus on improving educational quality and reducing educational disparities; and (3) investment in educational research and development in the United States has played out largely at the national level, with weak state investment and with state policy agendas for innovation and improvement shaped heavily by national-level policy activity. Understanding the policy context of improvement-focused educational research, thus, is an interpretive exercise that requires examining patterns of thought and action in this complex idea space. To support readers in this exercise, this article is structured in three parts: (1) an examination of the broader US educational policy context; (2) an examination of what we describe as a “resource-based approach” to educational innovation and improvement; and (3) an examination of what we describe as the “practice-based approach” to educational innovation and improvement. Since the 1950s, the resource-based approach has been a chief focus of federal and national policy. The practice-based approach has developed concurrently and in interaction with the resource-based approach, though absent commensurate federal policy support. Together, the resource-based and practice-based approaches to educational innovation and improvement provide a framework for understanding the policy contexts from which improvement-focused educational research has emerged and in which it is developing.

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Research/Scholarly Media

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Published Text

Scholarship genre

Historical
Theoretical
Bibliography

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Open access/full-text available

No

Citation

Peurach, D. J., & Foster, A. T. (2020). The Policy Context of United States Educational Innovation and Improvement. Oxford Bibliographies. https://doi.org/10.1093/OBO/9780199756810-0249

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Cited in
Title Alternate label Class
Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015 Statute
Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of the New Reform Journal Article
Learning Sciences and Policy Design and Implementation: Key Concepts and Tools for Collaborative Engagement Book Chapter
How People Learn: Bridging Research and Practice Book
Improving Educational Research: Toward a More Useful, More Influential, and Better-Funded Enterprise Journal Article
Design Experiments: Theoretical and Methodological Challenges in Creating Complex Interventions in Classroom Settings Journal Article
The Innovation Journey Book
The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences Book
Implementation: How Great Expectations in Washington are Dashed in Oakland: Or, Why It's Amazing that Federal Programs Work at All, This Being a Saga of the Economic Development Administration as Told by Two Sympathetic Observers Who Seek to Build Morals on a Foundation of Ruined Hopes Book
Diffusion of Innovations Book
Handbook of Organizational Change and Innovation Book
Developmental Evaluation: Applying Complexity Concepts to Enhance Innovation and Use Book
Usable Knowledge: Social Science and Social Problem Solving Book
Action Research and Minority Problems Journal Article
The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies Book
The Oxford Handbook of Innovation Management Book
Going to Scale with New School Designs: Reinventing High School Book
Improvement by Design: The Promise of Better Schools Book
Instructional Program Coherence: What It Is and Why It Should Guide School Improvement Policy Journal Article
Achieving Coherence in District Improvement: Managing the Relationship Between the Central Office and Schools Book
Designing Coherent Education Policy: Improving the System Book
Organizing Schools for Improvement: Lessons from Chicago Book
Planned Organizational Change Book Chapter
Backward Mapping: Implementation Research and Policy Decisions Journal Article
Federal Programs Supporting Educational Change: Vol. VIII, Implementing and Sustaining Innovations Report

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