The War Against Excellence

The War Against Excellence
Author: Cheri Pierson Yecke
Publisher: R&L Education
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2005-05-12
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1461655153

Here, veteran teacher Cheri Pierson Yecke details the chronological history of the middle school movement in the U. S. by tracing its evolution from academically-oriented junior high schools to the dissolution of academics in the middle schools of the late 1980s and beyond. In this book, evidence is presented to show how leaders of this movement designed to use the middle school as a vehicle to promote non-academic goals, contrary to the desires of parents and the community. Favored instructional practices—such as the elimination of ability grouping and the rise in cooperative learning and peer tutoring—have produced coerced egalitarianism, where education performance is equalized by bringing the achievement of gifted and high ability students down to the level of mediocrity. The War against Excellence examines the impact of: ·The reduction of academic expectations ·Widespread elimination of ability grouping Features include: ·Examples of how favored middle school instructional practices have been implemented in other countries, and ·An analysis on the implications of these changes for the future of our country The influence of these changes has seriously crippled our middle schools in their obligation to provide a solid academic foundation for all students. Yecke provides research-based information that will appeal to parents and educators who want to confront problems with specific instructional practices and improve public education.

The Junior High School

The Junior High School
Author: Leonard V. Koos
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1920
Genre: High schools
ISBN:

In 1909-10, the junior high school appeared in America as a deliberately planned unit of our public-school system. The idea developed slowly, and then WWI checked its progress almost completely. Now it is estimated there are more than 2,500 such schools in the United States. In this book Dr. Koos addresses the conditions that produced the junior high school, and lists its peculiar functions--the most important of which are a democratic school system, the recognition of the nature of adolescence, provision for better teaching, the securing of better scholarship, and improvement of the disciplinary situation and the socializing opportunities. The book is a real contribution to the literature of the junior high school. It should be studied by all who are concerned with the development or the ad- ministration of this new type of school organization.

The Small Junior High School

The Small Junior High School
Author: Francis Trow Spaulding
Publisher:
Total Pages: 286
Release: 1927
Genre: High schools
ISBN:

The volume examines some of the problems facing junior high schools in small communities, and offers the results of a study designed to assess the viability of strategies designed to solve them. The data in this volume is based on the study of nineteen small schools in Massachusetts. The availability of funds for current of proposed programs, unpredictable changes in enrollment, and the problem of administrative organization. As these conditions can exist in any small school, the conclusions of this study may be considered valid for small schools in general.

This We Believe

This We Believe
Author: National Middle School Association
Publisher: National Middle School Assn
Total Pages: 66
Release: 2010-01-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781560902324

The Junior High School

The Junior High School
Author: New York (N.Y.). Board of Education. Bureau of Reference, Research and Statistics
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1919
Genre: Junior high schools
ISBN: