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Breaking the “Adopt, Attack, Abandon” Cycle: A Case for Improvement Science in K–12 Education

Item

Title

Breaking the “Adopt, Attack, Abandon” Cycle: A Case for Improvement Science in K–12 Education

Abstract/Description

School reform efforts have collectively failed to find sustainable solutions to education's most pressing problems. Researchers and education practitioners have both vocalized these challenges. The difficulty of fitting proven reforms to local school contexts often leads to a cycle of “adopt, attack, and abandon.” This chapter discusses the potential power of improvement science to break the cycle in education. In doing so, the research aims to understand the school leader's perspective when improvement science processes were employed at their sites. The research examined three school cases, as principals used rapid cycles of evaluations, using the improvement science PDSA model. In addition to providing a better understanding of what factors facilitate or constrain the implementation of rapid cycles of evaluation in school sites, the research offers insight into how evaluators can use improvement science methods to adapt interventions or practices to local context.

Author/creator

Date

Volume

2017

Issue

153

Pages

65-77

Resource type

Research/Scholarly Media

Resource status/form

Published Text

Scholarship genre

Empirical

ISSN

1534-875X

Citation

Rohanna, K. (2017). Breaking the “Adopt, Attack, Abandon” Cycle: A Case for Improvement Science in K–12 Education. New Directions for Evaluation, 2017(153), 65–77. https://doi.org/10.1002/ev.20233

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