The Normal Accident Theory of Education
Why Reform and Regulation Won’t Make Schools Better- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2014
Summary
Much of the current debate about education too often resembles the blind men describing an elephant--apprehending only a particular part of the situation or the process, many analysts tell an evocative but incomplete story. The so-called ‘reform’ discussion proceeds with a lack of depth about the nuances and realistic limitations in the institutional order of school.
This book argues that as regulation of schools moves further up the bureaucratic hierarchy (first to state departments of education then to the national department of education) the legal and institutional requirements get more intensive but less concretely useful in class rooms. This bureaucratization serves to ‘tighten’ the organizational environment, thereby increasing the risk of normal accidents. The increasing governmental management, in other words, makes it more likely that schools will ‘fail’ to meet their goals.
Analyses of education are too often developed for public consumption in a fast-moving political world. This book examines some of the deeper organizational reasons why things don’t work so well in school, as well as a look at some of things that do work. Most importantly, the book will explain how the social and cultural expectations of what schools can do may create unrealistic hopes. We, as a society, and schools, as institutions, embrace these unreasonably high hopes at our collective peril.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2014
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4758-0658-8
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4758-0659-5
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 132
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Preface No access
- 1 The Problem with Public Schools No access Pages 1 - 12
- 2 Why Schools Have Normal Accidents Routinely No access Pages 13 - 30
- 3 Complexity and the Social Conversation No access Pages 31 - 46
- 4 Organizational Culture and Social Expectations No access Pages 47 - 64
- 5 Standardized Testing Creates a Culture of Complexity No access Pages 65 - 80
- 6 Standardized Tests and the Complexity of Learning No access Pages 81 - 94
- 7 Technology Adds Layer of Complication No access Pages 95 - 104
- 8 Markets and Education No access Pages 105 - 118
- 9 Where We Go From Here No access Pages 119 - 126
- Bibliography No access Pages 127 - 132





