Book contents
- Implementing Educational Reform
- Implementing Educational Reform
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures and Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Why Focus on Implementation in Education Reform?
- 2 Promoting Equity in Education through System Change
- 3 A Decade of Reform in Hong Kong
- 4 Reforming a Whole School System
- 5 The Challenges and Opportunities of Greater Autonomy for Post-Soviet Universities
- 6 School Improvement by Design
- 7 Promising Practice in Government Schools in Vietnam
- 8 Reform Implementation Lessons
- 9 Qatar’s Road to Education Reform
- 10 Implementing Educational Reform
- Index
- References
6 - School Improvement by Design
Why It’s Needed, How It Works and How It Can Be Improved
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2021
- Implementing Educational Reform
- Implementing Educational Reform
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures and Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Why Focus on Implementation in Education Reform?
- 2 Promoting Equity in Education through System Change
- 3 A Decade of Reform in Hong Kong
- 4 Reforming a Whole School System
- 5 The Challenges and Opportunities of Greater Autonomy for Post-Soviet Universities
- 6 School Improvement by Design
- 7 Promising Practice in Government Schools in Vietnam
- 8 Reform Implementation Lessons
- 9 Qatar’s Road to Education Reform
- 10 Implementing Educational Reform
- Index
- References
Summary
This chapter examines six externally developed ‘Instructional Improvement Programmes’ in the United States which have been subjects of a sustained programme of intervention studies. All six programmes sought to change instructional practice in both English Language Arts and mathematics and were adopted by schools both as a result of government incentives and normal ‘market’ processes. All six were externally evaluated by carefully measuring patterns of instructional practice and student achievement in order to assess the extent to which the programmes succeeded in changing teaching and improving student learning. Some programmes changed teaching and improved student learning, some changed teaching but did not improve student learning and some programmes did not change teaching or improve student learning. One proposition drawn from these evaluations is that successful external programmes of instructional improvement have well-specified designs for instruction and provide strong pressures and supports to encourage faithful implementation of these instructional designs in classrooms.
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- Implementing Educational ReformCases and Challenges, pp. 105 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021