Type | Report |
Title | The Road Less Traveled: Changing Schools from the Inside Out |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | https://www.mcrel.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Road_Less_Traveled_Dec2015_web.pdf |
Abstract | We’re all familiar with Robert Frost’s poem, “The Road Not Taken,” often evoked as a triumphant homage to individualism, urging us to strike out on our own and follow unconventional paths wherever they may lead. Yet as literary critics point out, such exhortations get it wrong. Frost may have really been trying to convey a more complex and wistful truth: namely, how we tend to fool ourselves into thinking we’ve made good decisions— or even decisions at all—when in truth, we might have been victims of a coin toss of fate (Orr, 2015). Roughly 30 years ago, American educators stood at a crossroads, with a decision to make about the future of education. With our ears ringing of warnings that we were facing a “rising tide of mediocrity” (National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983) and recognizing unacceptable gaps in achievement between disadvantaged students and others, we set off down a path of reform that has, in the words of Frost, “made all the difference”—or has it? One thing we know for sure is that it altered how we have gone about running our schools. |
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