Review of Berliner & Biddle "The Manufactured Crisis"
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v4n1.1996Palavras-chave:
Book Review, Academic Achievement, Achievement Gains, Achievement Tests, Conservatism, Educational History, Educational Trends, Elementary and Secondary Education, International Education, International Studies, Performance Factors, Political AttitudesResumo
In a provocative new book, The Manufactured Crisis, David Berliner and Bruce Biddle make four sweeping claims about U.S. achievement: there never was a test score decline, today's students are "out-achieving their parents substantially" (p. 33), U.S. students "stack up very well" in international assessments (p. 63), and the general education crisis is a right-wing fabrication. As a progressive, I'm sympathetic to their concerns, but as a scholar who specializes in this material, I find their analysis deeply flawed and misleading. They mischaracterize the test score decline data, mishandle the international findings, and fail to acknowledge students' continuing low levels of academic achievement.Downloads
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1996-01-23
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Stedman, L. C. (1996). Review of Berliner & Biddle "The Manufactured Crisis". Arquivos Analíticos De Políticas Educativas, 4, 1. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v4n1.1996
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