Full Description
The most durable and robust problem facing educational research since the mid-twentieth century is the persistence of educational inequality. Under new economic, technological and cultural conditions, many diverse populations and communities face emergent and long-standing patterns of educational exclusion and marginalization. The authors examine what constitutes evidence in education research within and across a broad range of educational issues, and how evidence can be, and is used, to shape regional, national, and international educational policies on equity and inclusion. The chapters in this volume scrutinize different forms of evidence and focus on how they constitute different ways of naming and defining, explaining and framing equality and inequality in educational policy and practice.
Contents
Introduction: What Counts as Evidence and Equity? - Allan Luke, Judith Green, and Gregory J. Kelly
The Uses of Evidence for Educational Policymaking: Global Contexts and International Trends - Alexander W. Wiseman
Naming and Classifying: Theory, Evidence, and Equity in Education - Samuel R. Lucas and Lauren Beresford
Education Rights and Classroom-Based Litigation: Shifting the Boundaries of Evidence - Kevin Welner
Beyond Academic Outcomes - James G. Ladwig
Defining Equity: Multiple Perspectives to Analyzing the Performance of Diverse Learners - Will J. Jordan
New Technology and Digital Worlds: Analyzing Evidence of Equity in Access, Use, and Outcomes - Mark Warschauer and Tina Matuchniak
Evidence of the Impact of School Reform on Systems Governance and Educational Bureaucracies in the United States - Gail L. Sunderman
What Counts as Evidence of Educational Achievement? The Role of Constructs in the Pursuit of Equity in Assessment - Dylan Wiliam
The Teacher Workforce and Problems of Educational Equity - Judith Warren Little and Lora Bartlett
The Changing Social Spaces of Learning: Mapping New Mobilities - Kevin M. Leander, Nathan C. Phillips, Katherine Headrick Taylor