Sustained Improvers and Promising Starts
From Chapter 8
You can access this title through a library that has purchased it. More information about purchasing is available at our website.
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
The book explores the idea that practical and useful knowledge changes over time, and shows how this knowledge has been (re)visioned in contemporary research on educational reform, instructional improvement, and professionalization. The study of science draws on a range of social and cultural theories and historical studies to understand the politics of science, as well as scientific knowledge that is concerned with social and educational change. Research hopes to change social conditions to create a better life, and to shape people whose conduct embodies these valued characteristics—the good citizen, parent, or worker. Yet this hope continually articulates the dangers that threaten this future. Thomas Popkewitz explores how the research to correct social wrongs is paradoxically entangled with the inscription of differences that ultimately hamper the efforts to include.
From Chapter 8
Fig. 10. Sustained improvers and promising starts. Exhibit from “How the World’s Most Improved School Systems Keep Getting Better.” November 2010, McKinsey Company, www.mckinsey.com. Copyright © 2019 McKinsey Company. Reprinted by permission.
From Chapter 8
Fig. 9. Percentage of 15-year-old students performing at PISA mathematics literacy profi-ciency levels 5 and above and below level 2. Reprinted from Performance of U.S. 15-Year-Old Students in Mathematics, Science, and Reading Literacy in an International Context—First Look at PISA 2012 (Kelly et al. 2013, 14). Reprinted by permission of the National Center for Education Statistics.