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BookPrinted Material
Author Aldridge, Jerry, author.

Title Current issues and trends in education / Jerry Aldridge, Renitta Goldman.

Publication Info. Boston, MA : Pearson/Allyn and Bacon, [2007]
©2007

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Talbott: Offsite Storage  LA217.2 .A42 2007    Available  ---
Edition Second edition.
Description xv, 205 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Part I Political, Economic, and Historical Trends in Education -- Chapter 1 Politics and Education 1 -- Are Our Politicians Up to the Job? 1 -- Conservative Backlash 3 -- Are We Lowering Standards? 4 -- Disparities Between Curriculum and Student Needs 5 -- Who Controls the Schools? 5 -- Democratic-Progressive Discourse 6 -- Do We Have Other Choices? 6 -- Federal, State, and Local Control 7 -- Recent and Future Political Challenges 7 -- Attitudes about Schooling 7 -- Policy Issues Related to Education 8 -- George W. Bush Educational Initiatives 9 -- Misguided Educational Reform? 10 -- Chapter 2 Changing Demographics and Diversity 16 -- Population Statistics 16 -- U.S. Economy: An Overview 17 -- Trends in Demography of Childhood Poverty 18 -- Americans on the Move 18 -- Teacher Mobility 19 -- Average American Family 21 -- Changing School Demographics 21 -- Over- and Underrepresentation in Special Education Programs 22 -- Defining Culture 24 -- High School Graduation Rates 26 -- High School Dropout and College Enrollment Rates 27 -- Employment 27 -- Health 28 -- Crime 28 -- Gangs 28 -- Additional Trends 29 -- People of Color Living in Concentrated Poverty 29 -- Is Diversity a Myth? Is Singling Out One Group for Special Privileges Simultaneously Patronizing and Bigoted? 30 -- What Groups Are Considered Diverse Learners? 30 -- Educators' Coping with Changing Demographics 37 -- Is Diversity a Myth? 38 -- Impact of Diversity on U.S. Education 38 -- Inadequate Assumptions About Human Development 41 -- Ethnicity in America: Bridging the Gap Between a History of Racism and a Future Toward Equality in Diversity 42 -- Teachers' Responses to Diversity 45 -- Chapter 3 Rights of Stakeholders in Education 51 -- Rights of Children 51 -- Disparity Continues 52 -- Children and Youth at Risk: An Overview 52 -- A Promising Approach for Addressing At-Risk Students 54 -- Children Living in Poverty 55 -- Face of Poverty among Young Children Is Changing 56 -- Homelessness 58 -- Causes of Homelessness 58 -- Consequences of Homelessness 59 -- Policy Issues on Homelessness 60 -- Child Abuse and Neglect 60 -- Prevalence Data on Child Abuse: A Continued Issue of Uncertainty 60 -- What Do Abuse and Neglect Mean? 62 -- How Do We Recognize It? 63 -- Child Fatalities 63 -- Child Care 64 -- Substance Abuse 65 -- Characteristics of Victims 65 -- Age 65 -- Gender 65 -- Ethnicity 66 -- People with Special Needs 66 -- Characteristics of Perpetrators 67 -- People Known to the Child 67 -- Stranger Danger 67 -- Gender 67 -- History of Child Abuse 67 -- Child Victims and the Law 69 -- Effects of Child Abuse 69 -- On Children 69 -- On Adults Who Were Abused as Children 70 -- Costs of Abuse 71 -- Need for Prevention 72 -- Student Disposition-Personality: Determinants of Right or Wrongdoing 72 -- Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Violence 73 -- Proclivity toward Violence 73 -- Bullying 74 -- Cheating 74 -- Violence and Child Development 75 -- Violence during the Preschool Years 75 -- Violence during the School Years 76 -- Violence during College 77 -- Teacher Stress and Burnout 77 -- Pay 78 -- Student Characteristics 78 -- School Policies 79 -- Striving for Solutions 79 -- What Parents Can Do 80 -- Influence of the Media 81 -- Violence Prevention in the Community 82 -- Safety Issues 82 -- Cell phones 82 -- Discipline 83 -- Corporal Punishment 83 -- Need for Teachers to Deal with Abuse 85 -- Protecting Our Children and Our Teachers (against Litigation) 85 -- Part II Evolving Notions of Human Development and Learning -- Chapter 4 Theoretical Shifts in Our Understanding of Children 94 -- Changing Worldviews 94 -- Changing Theories 96 -- Maturational Theory 96 -- Behaviorist Theory 97 -- Psychoanalytic Theory 97 -- Constructivist Theory 98 -- Sociohistorical Approach 98 -- Ecological Systems Theory 99 -- Multiple Intelligences Theory 99 -- Problems with Traditional Psychological Theories 99 -- What Shall we do with Dead, White, Western Men? 100 -- What Did These Dead, White, Western Men Really Say? 100 -- Critical Theory 101 -- Modern and Postmodern Theories 102 -- Chapter 5 Changing Curricular Practices 107 -- Teaching as Transmission 107 -- Teaching as Transaction 108 -- Teaching as Inquiry 109 -- Teaching as Transformation 110 -- Part III Changing Views of Assessment and Instruction -- Chapter 6 No Child Left Behind? 113 -- An Overview of No Child Left Behind 113 -- Title I Improving the Academic Achievement of the Disadvantaged 114 -- Title II Preparing, Training, and Recruiting High-Quality Teachers and Principals 114 -- Title III Language Instruction for Limited English Proficient and Immigrant Students 115 -- Title IV Twenty-first Century Schools 115 -- Title V Promoting Informed Parental Choice and Innovative Programs 115 -- Title VI Flexibility and Accountability 115 -- Title VII-X Other Requirements under No Child Left Behind 116 -- Nine Issues Related to No Child Left Behind 116 -- Chapter 7 Developmentally Appropriate Practice: Best Practice for All Students 121 -- What is Developmentally Appropriate Practice? 122 -- What is the History of Developmentally Appropriate Practice? 123 -- What is the Research Base for Developmentally Appropriate Practice? 123 -- How Has Developmentally Appropriate Practice Influenced Educational Practice? 125 -- Accreditation 125 -- An Emphasis on the Whole Child 125 -- Individualized Instruction 125 -- Acceptance and Use of Children's Prior Knowledge 125 -- Active Learning 126 -- More In-Depth Study of a Topic 126 -- Importance of Play 126 -- Multiage Grouping 126 -- Teacher as Reflective Decision Maker 126 -- Parent Involvement 127 -- What Are the Criticisms of Developmentally Appropriate Practice? 127 -- Problems Related to Children with Disabilities 127 -- Criticisms Related to Context 127 -- Issues Related to Theory 129 -- Problems Related to No Child Left Behind 130 -- What Is the Future of Developmentally Appropriate Practice? 131 -- Chapter 8 Social Promotion, Retention, and Alternative Possibilities / Janice N. Cotton 135 -- Social Promotion 135 -- Prevalence of Social Promotion 135 -- Negative Effects of Social Promotion 136 -- Implications and Findings from Local Social Promotion Policies 136 -- Conclusions about Social Promotion 137 -- Grade Retention 137 -- Prevalence and Cost of Grade Retention 138 -- Retention and Academic Achievement 138 -- Retention and Social and Health Implications 139 -- Conclusions about Retention 139 -- Alternatives to Social Promotion and Grade Retention 140 -- Bottom Line 144 -- Part IV Issues in Accommodating Individual and Family Differences -- Chapter 9 Teaching in Inclusive Settings: The Challenge and the Opportunity to Engage in Inclusive Strategies 148 -- What Is Inclusion? 149 -- How Did We Get Here? 150 -- Should We Have Inclusion or Full Inclusion? 150 -- Mainstreaming 151 -- Regular Education Initiative 151 -- Is Inclusion Better Than Full Inclusion? 151 -- What about Full Inclusion and the Law? 153 -- Should We Prepare for Full Inclusion or Just Inclusion? 154 -- Preparing the System 155 -- Preparing Teachers 155 -- Preparing Families 155 -- Preparing Students 155 -- What Are the Advantages of Full Inclusion? 156 -- Academic Advantages 156 -- Discipline Problems 156 -- Gains in Socialization 156 -- Benefits to Regular Education Students 157 -- What Are the Barriers to Inclusion? 157 -- Changing Roles for Educators 157 -- Adverse Effects on Students 158 -- What Would Make Full Inclusion Work? 158 -- Delivery Models That Work 159 -- Consultation 160 -- Team Teaching 160 -- Aides' Services 161 -- Limited Pullout Service 161 -- Peer Tutoring 162 -- Teaching Devices 162 -- Are There Any Results That Support or Refute Inclusion? 163 -- Chapter 10 Multicultural Education and the Cultural Curriculum 166 -- Misconceptions About Cultural Diversity 167 -- Cultural Dilemmas Teachers Face in the 21st Century 170 -- How Can We Work with Students Who Are Limited English Proficient? 174 -- Who Are Limited English Proficient Students? 174 -- Who Teaches Students with Limited English Proficiency? 174 -- How Do Students with Limited English Proficiency Learn Best in an English-Speaking Classroom? 175 -- What Should We Teach with Regard to Culture? 175 -- How Should We Teach with Regard to Culture? 176 -- Chapter 11 Working with Families 178 -- Married-Couple Families 179 -- Grandparents as Parents 180 -- Gay- and Lesbian-Headed Households 180 -- Black Families 181 -- Asian American Families 182 -- Latino Families 183 -- Other Family Structures or Defining Characteristics 184 -- Chapter 12 Discipline and Classroom Management 187 -- Heteronomy 188 -- Problems with Rewards 188 -- Autonomy 190 -- Epilogue: What's Next? Future Issues and Trends in Education 193.
Summary An exploration of twenty-first century trends and issues in education that discusses politics, demographics, diversity, rights of stakeholders, curricular practices, No Child Left Behind legislation, social promotion, multicultural education, and other related topics.
Language English text.
Subject Education -- United States.
Education.
United States.
Education -- Aims and objectives -- United States.
Education -- Aims and objectives.
Added Author Goldman, Renitta L., author.
ISBN 0205486207 (alkaline paper)
9780205486205 (alkaline paper)