In an effort to address the problems confronting the American
education system, the Obama administration has issued structural
and systematic reforms such as "Race to the Top." These initiatives
introduce new statistics and accountability systems to gauge what
constitutes "good" teaching, both from an administrative standpoint
and the perspective of teacher training programs. This volume
offers a direct critique of this approach, concluding that it does
not respond adequately to the issues of education reform but rather
raises new problems and actively stymies progress.
The author argues that at the heart of the confusion lies a
misguided and rationalistic view of teaching and learning. He draws
on the philosophical strategies of Ludwig Wittgenstein to break
down the guiding assumptions of "Race to the Top," allowing both
the positive and the negative aspects of the policies to be heard.
The author then proposes a different view of teaching and learning
which considers how to effectively address the problems "Race to
the Top" seeks to confront.
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