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Big Brother and the National Reading Curriculum: How Ideology Trumped Evidence

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By: Richard L. Allington
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EDITORIAL REVIEW



New legislation will transform American public education. Basic to the No Child Left Behind Act and the Put Reading First program is a new and substantial federal intrusion into local curriculum control and teacher autonomy. This intrusion is masked in the legislative mandate for "evidence-based", or "scientific", reading instruction. Beyond the distortions of the findings of the National Reading Panel Report that undergird the new federal initiatives, there are other federal mandates, past and current, that have also impeded improving reading instruction - and worse, the public education system - through privatization, teacher disempowerment, and a systemic business model.



In this timely and important book, nationally-recognized reading researcher Richard Allington tracks and questions the 30-year campaign that has focused on testing, accountability, and federalization of education. He and other educators, including Jim Cunningham, Michael Pressley, Elaine Garan, and Patrick Shannon, have contributed articles that provide an overview of past and recent federal education policies, including the NRP Report and associated legislation and policy making, with analyses of the premises of the new national reading plan. By showing how these premises are manufactured - that is, not reliably supported by the research - they explain why this plan is an unwarranted federal encroachment into local educational decision making.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Heinemann
Pub. Date: 5th September 2002
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 312
Ean: 9780325005133
Isbn: 0325005133

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

scholarly, research-based, informative.
~ Written on May 20, 2005. 7 out of 7 users found this review helpful.

Those who have read little about literacy education or who have not examined any significant amount of research related to literacy instruction will probably not appreciate this book (see some of the reviews here). However, Richard Allington's voice is important in the field of literacy education because he does not start with an answer and look for data to support his answer. Rather, he starts with a question and looks at ALL the research data to answer his question. The factory paradigm and behavioristic model does not work with human beings who are struggling to become literate. Having read a fairly wide breadth of research related to literacy, and having previewed a majority of literacy education texts currently in use, I can highly recommend this book and others by Allington.

Can you handle the truth?
~ Written on Jun 11, 2004. 11 out of 11 users found this review helpful.

I believe that one of the reasons that reading professionals are blindly - cattle-like - following the NCLB and other new reading legislation is that the truth might not be something they want to know -- it would just muddy the waters too much. This book clearly walks readers through how we find ourselves in the current mess - botched and sloppy meta research methods by the NRP followed by knee-jerk governmental responses run the risk of us failing to provide exemplary literacy instruction for our nation's children and non-literate adults.

This important book will help you make sense of what is going on around us and maybe, just maybe, be able to articulate to our legislators the need for the TRUTH to be discussed in a constructive way. Let's leave a politically-based reading curriculum behind, not our nation's children and non-literate adults.

Whole language at its worse.
~ Written on May 7, 2003. 4 out of 50 users found this review helpful.

I can't imagine teaching at risk children with this view of the world of real reading research. Texas and California were unmitigated whole language disastors, not that Mr. Allington and his crew will ever own up.

This is not a "Who Shot JFK Conspiracy" book...to many facts
~ Written on Feb 28, 2003. 32 out of 36 users found this review helpful.

This is not a "Who Shot JFK Conspiracy" book...too many facts! Is it possible that we are being purposefully misled in the area of early reading?
Are publishers so driven by greed?
Are politicians so easily led?
Are so-called researchers so complacent that they quote and depend on research that they haven't verified and validated?
Are educators so shallow, lazy, and insecure that they only read the dummied-down research summaries or worse...just buy the prepackaged, one-size-fits-all programs that will magically teach all children to read?

Apparently most of the answers to these questions are the same...yes.

Educators- don't spend another dime in early reading curriculum or hire another early reading consultant without reading (and considering) Allington's book.

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