Untangling Urban Middle School Reform

Clashing Agendas for Literacy Standards and Student Success

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Language Arts, Literacy, Education & Teaching
Cover of the book Untangling Urban Middle School Reform by Cynthia D. Urbanski, Teachers College Press
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Author: Cynthia D. Urbanski ISBN: 9780807774823
Publisher: Teachers College Press Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Cynthia D. Urbanski
ISBN: 9780807774823
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint:
Language: English

At Rosa Parks, a middle school in a crime-ridden neighborhood, students are advised to “do as they are told” and they will succeed. Unfortunately, “doing what they are told” often translates into repeating information given to them by the teacher, especially when it comes to writing. Meanwhile, students in an affluent neighborhood nearby are encouraged to be creative and think critically. This book examines the experience of one school’s resistance to the deficit model of education and how it represents the overall story of urban school reform. Highlighting the consequences of the implementation of the Common Core State Standards in literacy, the author weighs the perspectives of teachers, National Writing Project consultants, and administrators. Her up-close analysis illuminates how rigid accountability structures shift power away from the teachers and administrators who know the students best. As such, it illustrates the complex nature of writing instruction in urban schools.

Book Features:

  • Provides valuable lessons learned that can be applied throughout the United States to improve urban schools.
  • Offers rich portraits of students and teachers who resist the deficit identities placed on them by the dominant narrative of urban school reform.
  • Presents a forum for those who are often silenced and talked about where they can speak for themselves.

“This is a story of life at Rosa Parks Middle School as teachers, administrators, and consultants take up a school improvement project, but it is also the story of life in an urban middle school under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and its larger operational context of generalized, bureaucratized distrust.”
—From the Foreword by Elyse Eidman-Aadahl, executive director, National Writing Project

“Teachers and administrators who are trying to untangle new college- and career-ready standards and district curricular and assessment requirements, which is to say almost everyone in education, will find this book extremely useful.”
Tom Fox, California State University

“This important and timely book is a valuable contribution to the field of education. It provides a critical view of the effects of current educational reform on teachers and students working in an ethnically and linguistically diverse urban middle school.”
Jessica Early, Arizona State University

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

At Rosa Parks, a middle school in a crime-ridden neighborhood, students are advised to “do as they are told” and they will succeed. Unfortunately, “doing what they are told” often translates into repeating information given to them by the teacher, especially when it comes to writing. Meanwhile, students in an affluent neighborhood nearby are encouraged to be creative and think critically. This book examines the experience of one school’s resistance to the deficit model of education and how it represents the overall story of urban school reform. Highlighting the consequences of the implementation of the Common Core State Standards in literacy, the author weighs the perspectives of teachers, National Writing Project consultants, and administrators. Her up-close analysis illuminates how rigid accountability structures shift power away from the teachers and administrators who know the students best. As such, it illustrates the complex nature of writing instruction in urban schools.

Book Features:

“This is a story of life at Rosa Parks Middle School as teachers, administrators, and consultants take up a school improvement project, but it is also the story of life in an urban middle school under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and its larger operational context of generalized, bureaucratized distrust.”
—From the Foreword by Elyse Eidman-Aadahl, executive director, National Writing Project

“Teachers and administrators who are trying to untangle new college- and career-ready standards and district curricular and assessment requirements, which is to say almost everyone in education, will find this book extremely useful.”
Tom Fox, California State University

“This important and timely book is a valuable contribution to the field of education. It provides a critical view of the effects of current educational reform on teachers and students working in an ethnically and linguistically diverse urban middle school.”
Jessica Early, Arizona State University

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