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Valerie Norville – National Association of State Boards of Education, 2025
With feedback gathered from townhall meetings at the start of 2025, Kentucky's education leaders are revising the state's assessment and accountability framework to give districts more choice in how they assess student mastery of content and skills and to give their communities full rein to design local school accountability systems tied to their…
Descriptors: High Schools, Educational Change, Mathematics Achievement, Algebra
Angela M. Jack; Ben Pogodzinski – Educational Policy, 2025
Accountability efforts under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) has brought greater attention to school-level processes and practices and their impact on student outcomes. This has pushed states to report more school-level inputs, including per-pupil expenditures. Grounded in an open systems theory (OST) framework, we identify the association…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Finance, Expenditures, Academic Achievement
James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, 2024
The surest measure of a successful college or university is the academic success of its students. True academic success requires incoming students to be academically prepared for college rigor, and is demonstrated by the availability of high-quality academic programs and evidence of personal and professional growth in the years after students'…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Accountability, Higher Education, Course Descriptions
Matthew S. McCluskey – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2024
In their nascent stages, charter schools formed under competing ideologies. In academic circles, charter schools were envisioned as pedagogical laboratories that would allow for educator- and community-driven school improvement. In other circles, charter schools emerged as a free-market reform driven by accountability, choice, and growth. Amid the…
Descriptors: Scaling, Organizational Culture, Values, Charter Schools
Timothy A. Drake – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2024
In this review, I examined the last two decades of research on data use in education to outline the ways in which principals used data to inform their own leadership practices. I found three themes: first, student achievement data were the most widespread form of data that principals used; second, principals' work has been reshaped by teacher…
Descriptors: Principals, Data Use, Academic Achievement, Teacher Evaluation
Brian Stillings – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
I grew up on free school meals and now work as a school improvement adviser. In this article, I address discontinuities within my 'support and challenge' role, a role that can be constrained by educational policy enacted within a performative and panoptic culture of fear. Successive governments have concerned themselves with promoting equity…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Accountability, Equal Education, Working Class
James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, 2024
Public university governing boards exist to serve the people of their states. It should, therefore, be easy for the public to know what governing bodies are doing. University governance, however, isn't always as transparent as it should be. Often, the public is given little advance notice of when and where meetings will be held and what issues…
Descriptors: College Administration, Governance, Universities, Educational Change
Claire Hamshire; Rachel Forsyth – International Journal for Academic Development, 2025
Significant conversations provide a private and safe space for teachers to develop their thinking about teaching and learning. These conversations are important to academic development but may be limited by their privacy, although Roxå & Mårtensson noted that it was possible to create a culture which led to extended networks. This study…
Descriptors: Race, Universities, Minority Group Students, College Students
Garion Frankel – Journal of School Choice, 2024
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the ensuring culture wars, the American school choice coalition has almost completely unraveled, but many school choice advocates assert that the coalition can be rebuilt. In this essay, I argue that the school choice coalition dissolved not because of politics or circumstance, but because the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, School Choice, Educational Change, Politics of Education
Andrew Pennington; Feng Su; Margaret Wood – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2024
The reduction in local control and oversight of schooling represented by the growth of Multi Academy Trusts (MATs) in England raises critical issues for public policy. These include the articulation and exercise of power in the governance of MATs, the future of democratic governance of local services and accountability. Applying Foucault's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Governance, Trusts (Financial), Educational Policy
Laura A. Taylor; Michiko Hikida – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2025
More than merely policy, neoliberalism shapes how teachers relate to their students and classrooms. This article seeks to make visible how neoliberalism functions to form and deform teacher's subjectivities (and in turn their pedagogical practices) through an analysis of the experiences of two teachers within an accountability-constrained…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Practices, Educational Policy, Accountability
Craig Peck; Tiffanie Lewis-Durham – Journal of School Leadership, 2025
In this conceptual study, we examined ways in which Black educational leaders responded to the nascent rise of widespread educational accountability in the 1960s and 1970s. In conducting our research, we used history research methods in investigating contemporary historical sources, including publications by the leaders whom we examined. We also…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Accountability, African Americans, Leadership
Lauren Sartain; Matthew P. Steinberg – Education Finance and Policy, 2025
Historically, teacher evaluation systems have identified few teachers as low-performing and needing improvement. In 2012, at the beginning of a national reform movement, Chicago Public Schools implemented its overhauled evaluation system, which incorporated multiple measures of teaching practice and dismissal plans for low-rated teachers. We find…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Teacher Effectiveness, Low Achievement, Public School Teachers
Javiera Marfán – Educational Policy, 2025
Chile has followed the international trend of implementing a standards-based reform, with the particularity of encompassing both academic and non-academic outcomes. Drawing on interview data from four school cases in Santiago, Chile, this study examines the role of attitudes in reform enactment, analyzing whether and how school actors' attitudes…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Attitudes, Educational Change, Academic Standards
Jaimie M. McMullen; Jennifer L. Walton-Fisette; Sue Sutherland – Quest, 2024
Given that standards-based education has been commonplace since the early 1980's, most practicing education professionals cannot remember a time where standards did not exist. Standards have historically served as a mechanism for accountability and academic achievement. In physical education, while not required in initial educational reforms, the…
Descriptors: Standards, Physical Education, Educational Change, Evidence