J. M. Beach is the founder and director of 21st Century Literacy, a non-profit organization focused on literacy education and teacher training. He was a lecturer in higher education for over 20 years in the U.S., South Korea, and China.
Description
Foreword Preface: We Aren't Measuring What Matters Most Introduction: Investigating the Myths of Measurement and the Meritocracy of Higher Education Chapter 1: Public Opinion Surveys: From Managing the Herd to Consumer Satisfaction Chapter 2: The Premise of Student Evaluation Surveys: Measuring Teacher Effectiveness Chapter 3: Pressured to Please: The Negotiated Compromise of Playing School Chapter 4: A Question of Validity: Student Surveys Don't Measure Teaching or Learning Chapter 5: Predictably Irrational: The Cognitive Miser and the Limits of Consumer Choice Chapter 6: Are Students Capable of Evaluating Teaching or Learning? An Investigation of the "Fox Effect" Chapter 7: Signaling or Human Capital? Credentialism, Degree Inflation, and Socio-Economic Inequality Chapter 8: The Myth of Meritocracy: The Cautionary Examples of Ancient China and Modern South Korea Conclusion: Can Schools Become Meritocratic Institutions? PreviewVolume 1: Can We Measure What Matters Most? Why Educational Accountability Metrics Lower Student Learning and Demoralize Teachers References Index About the Author
Reviews
Beach argues that the accountability movement, which has already done so much damage to American public schools, is now coming after higher education as well, and he shows that this effort is not only based on faulty measures but also promises to lay waste to a system that is the envy of the world. -- David F. Labaree, Professor Emeritus, Graduate School of Education, Standard University. He is author of How to Succeed in School Without Really Learning, Someone Has to Fail, and A Perfect Mess Playing school' is endemic throughout K-12 and higher education. Evaluation--both of students and of educators--is how we score the game. In this scholarly exploration of the sociology, economics, philosophy, and history of contemporary education, Josh Beach explores how and why the scoring rules became bogus and antithetical to supporting learning and improving teaching, rewarding behavior that undermines learning. The current quagmire arose from the postwar push for 'scientific' management--and viewing education as a consumer product--enabled by questionable measurement practices, irrational reverence for numbers, and a generous helping of the equivocation fallacy (e.g., conflating students' response to the prompt, 'how effective was the instructor?' with actual teaching effectiveness). I recommend this book to anyone who relies on, is subjected to, or engages in the evaluation of teaching and learning. -- Philip B. Stark, Associate Dean for the Division of Mathematical and Physical Sciences and Professor of Statistics, University of California at Berkeley