The substantive and symbolic consequences of a district's standards-based curriculum

This study examines a "critical case" of one school district's efforts to develop and implement a standards-based curriculum. The study was conducted from two competing perspectives that dominated organizational analysis in education: the rational and the institutional. The findings d...

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Veröffentlicht in:American educational research journal 2003, Vol.40 (1), p.147-176
Hauptverfasser: Ogawa, Rodney T, u.a
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study examines a "critical case" of one school district's efforts to develop and implement a standards-based curriculum. The study was conducted from two competing perspectives that dominated organizational analysis in education: the rational and the institutional. The findings demonstrate that the district took an expressly rationalistic approach by using standards and a corresponding criterion-referenced test to focus teachers' instruction on common sets of outcomes. However, the findings suggest that, lacking a clear instructional philosophy, the district also took an institutional approach, in part. Its approach to development and implementation of the standards-based curriculum resulted in district standards that fell below state standards, a narrowing of curriculum and instructional strategies, and professional development and instructional supervision that lacked an instructional focus. (DIPF/Orig.).
ISSN:0002-8312
1935-1011
DOI:10.3102/00028312040001147