As Ellen Goodman says in this terrific
retirement editorial, "January,
after all, is named for the Roman god of beginnings and endings. He looked
backward and forward at the same time." So, on this morning full of ones
(1/1/10) we do the same. For our retrospective-prospective from our
Knowledge Garage perspective, we have chosen to take the long view gazing
way back 10 years ago to the start of the Aughts and then leaping way
forward to the beginning of the next Roaring 20's with a stop in the here and
now. It's an interesting time-journey. Jump on board and let us know what you
think.
Federal education policy as a national priority
2000
--- Judging from the presidential primaries underway during this month,
education ranks in the top three in domestic policy.
2010 --- The rhetoric is high but the
polls show education off the radar screen, getting trumped by the economy,
health care, energy, jobs, etc
2020 --- Education is back on top this
time as part of major new domestic and global initiatives focusing on
sustainable development.
Standards-based reform as the framework for federal education policy
2000
--- Policy positions in both parties embrace standards-based reform and
share a big focus on alignment challenges and strengthening accountability
provisions.
2010 --- Heavy debate around common
core standards, multiple measures for determining AYP, and state capacity. The
stimulus funding, appropriations priorities, and ESEA reauthorization all build
on the standards based reform framework but some questions begin to emerge from
the innovation arena about speed and relevance.
2020 --- So long to standards based
reform as it is discarded for being too slow and ineffective as a theory of
change and replaced by technology-based learning infrastructures, grass roots
capacity building, and free market innovation.
Education R&D as a stimulus for change
2000
--- New initiatives in the late 90's (eg comprehensive school reform, reading
excellence act) requiring a research basis to program funding open up new
possibilities for transforming education into an evidence-based field.
2010 --- NCLB's scientifically based
research provisions and IES's focus on rigor create greater awareness (and
controversy) about research's potential role in ed reform. But R&D for
education is left out of the stimulus package (while other sectors net a cool
$18 billion). The i3 program raises the possibility of the federal government
as a venture capital partner for public school reform and innovation.
2020 --- The quality
improvement movement in health care is applied to education through new
catalyst R&D networks, intermediary research-to- innovation organizations,
and a digital knowledge ecosystem. Web 4.0 processes using next generation social
networking platforms inspire an "every day, everywhere R&D"
movement for teachers and schools.
Innovation as an education reform strategy
2000
--- Almost a dirty word.
2010 --- An overused concept but also
underused when spoken in the same sentence with knowledge and R&D in
education.
2020 --- Knowledge, R&D,
innovation and transformation are inseparable in concept and in practice as in
other sectors.
Federal
funding for education
2000
--- $38.4 Billion (see here)
2010 --- $120.4 Billion
(includes $57.7 for ARRA)
2020 --- $120 Billion
(after the cliff effect of ARRA)
Political strategies in education policy
2010 --- High-partisanship (as opposed to post-partisanship)
2020 --- Tri-partisanship with the emergence of a new independent party
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