Abstracts
Foreword (full text)
Senator Edward M. Kennedy
Introduction to Assessing NCLB (full text)
The Editors
No Child Left Behind
:
The Ongoing Movement for Public Education Reform [PDF available]
Rod Paige
From New Deal to No Deal
:
No Child Left Behind and the Devolution of Responsibility for Equal Opportunity [PDF available]
Harvey Kantor and Robert Lowe
Will NCLB Improve or Harm Public Education?
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[PDF available]
John W. Borkowski and Maree Sneed
Domesticating a Revolution
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No Child Left Behind Reforms and State Administrative Response [PDF available]
Gail L. Sunderman and Gary Orfield
Real Improvement for Real Students
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Test Smarter, Serve Better [PDF available]
Betty J. Sternberg
Why Connecticut Sued the Federal Government over No Child Left Behind
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[PDF available]
Richard Blumenthal
Accountability without Angst?
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Public Opinion and No Child Left Behind [PDF available]
Frederick M. Hess
Forces of Accountability?
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The Power of Poor Parents in NCLB [PDF available]
John Rogers
No Child Left Behind and High School Reform
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[PDF available]
Linda Darling-Hammond
Troubling Images of Teaching in No Child Left Behind
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[PDF available]
Marilyn Cochran-Smith and Susan Lytle
High School Students’ Perspectives on the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act’s Definition of a Highly Qualified Teacher
:
[PDF available]
Veronica Garcia, with Wilhemina Agbemakplido, Hanan Abdella, Oscar Lopez Jr., and Rashida T. Registe
Troubling Images of Teaching in No Child Left Behind :
[PDF available]
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Marilyn Cochran-Smith is the John E. Cawthorne Professor of Education and director of the doctoral program in curriculum and instruction at the Lynch School of Education, Boston College. Cochran-Smith has written numerous articles and books on diversity in teaching and teacher education, teacher research, teacher learning, and competing agendas for education reform. Her recent published works include Policy, Practice and Politics in Teacher Education: Editorials for the Journal of Teacher Education (2005), and Walking the Road: Race, Diversity and Social Justice in Teacher Education (2004).
Susan L. Lytle is an associate professor and chair of language and literacy in education at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education. She recently authored a chapter in Reconceptualizing the Literacies in Adolescents’ Lives, 2nd edition (edited by D. Alverman et al., 2006); and coauthored a chapter in the International Handbook of Self-Study of Teaching and Teacher Education Practices, Part I (with M. Cochran-Smith; edited by J. J. Loughran et al., 2005).