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Systemic School Reform

Item

Title

Systemic School Reform

Abstract/Description

This analytic essay draws on research about the effectiveness of current education policies as well as observations about developing policy systems in a number of states. The chapter begins with several observations about policy and school-level success, examines current barriers to school improvement and proposes a design for a systemic state structure that supports school-site efforts to improve classroom instruction and learning. The structure would be based on clear and challenging standards for student learning; policy components would be tied to the standards and reinforce one another in providing guidance to schools and teachers about instruction. Within the structure of coherent state leadership, schools would have the flexibility they need to develop strategies best suited to their students. The systemic school reform strategy combines the ‘waves’ of reform into a long-term improvement effort that puts coherence and direction into state reforms and content into the restructuring movement.

Date

Volume

5

Issue

5

Pages

233-267

Resource type

Research/Scholarly Media

Medium

Print

Background/context type

Policy

IRE Approach/Concept

Open access/free-text available

Yes

Peer reviewed

Yes

ISSN

0268-0939

Citation

Smith, M. S., & O’Day, J. (1990). Systemic School Reform. Journal of Education Policy, 5(5), 233–267. https://doi.org/10.1080/02680939008549074

Resource status/form

Published Text

Scholarship genre

Historical

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