Hugging the Middle

Autores/as

  • Larry Cuban Stanford University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v15n1.2007

Palabras clave:

No Child Left Behind, classroom environment, teacher-centered instruction, student-centered instruction.

Resumen

In the last quarter-century and especially the last decade, testing and accountability have come to dominate education policy at the state and national levels. The common concern about the effects of such testing is that it reshapes teaching in the classroom. But such claims do not look at the evidence of deeper classroom structures (the mix of teacher-centered and student-centered practices) in historical context. This article extends historical research in How Teachers Taught (Cuban, 1993) to the present in three metropolitan school districts. While testing and accountability have become more obvious concerns of teachers, the hybridized classroom environment documented in How Teachers Taught have become more pervasive. This article documents this continuing ubiquity and addresses the apparent inconsistency between evidence of a hybridized classroom environment and the unintended consequences of testing and accountability.

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Biografía del autor/a

Larry Cuban, Stanford University

Larry Cuban is Professor Emeritus of Education at Stanford University and the author of Teachers and Machines (1986), How Teachers Taught (1993), Tinkering toward Utopia (1995, with David Tyack), How Scholars Trumped Teachers (199), Oversold and Underused (2001), and The Blackboard and the Bottom Line (2005), among other writings.

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Publicado

2007-01-23

Cómo citar

Cuban, L. (2007). Hugging the Middle. Archivos Analíticos De Políticas Educativas, 15, 1. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v15n1.2007

Número

Sección

Articles