Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK

The opposing principles of local control and increased standardization are a prominent tension in the United States’ education system. Since at least the early 1990s, this tension has taken shape around the accountability movement, defined by educational reforms that hold schools, teachers, and stud...

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Main Authors: M. Elizabeth Graue, Bethany Wilinski, Amato Nocera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2016-05-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2366
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spelling doaj-91939102dc0d4dfda5f2e0a31b4460142020-11-25T02:32:05ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412016-05-0124010.14507/epaa.24.23661503Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preKM. Elizabeth Graue0Bethany Wilinski1Amato Nocera2University of Wisconsin MadisonMichigan State UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin MadisonThe opposing principles of local control and increased standardization are a prominent tension in the United States’ education system. Since at least the early 1990s, this tension has taken shape around the accountability movement, defined by educational reforms that hold schools, teachers, and students accountable for performance on new standards, assessments, and curricula. While many scholars have examined the manifestations of the current accountability movement, few have looked at this phenomenon within the growing public preK movement. Drawing from interviews with state policymakers and district-level actors, this paper describes how the seemingly contradictory principles of local control and increased state and national standards (what we refer to simply as standardization) are shaping the policy and practice of Wisconsin’s preK system, known as 4K. We argue that rational models of policy making fail to explain the coexistence and blending of the strands of local control and standardization we found in our data, and suggest that Deborah Stone’s (2001) policy paradox provides a better theoretical framework for our findings.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2366PreK policyWisconsinearly childhood educationlocal controlstandardizationpolicy paradoxaccountability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Elizabeth Graue
Bethany Wilinski
Amato Nocera
spellingShingle M. Elizabeth Graue
Bethany Wilinski
Amato Nocera
Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
Education Policy Analysis Archives
PreK policy
Wisconsin
early childhood education
local control
standardization
policy paradox
accountability
author_facet M. Elizabeth Graue
Bethany Wilinski
Amato Nocera
author_sort M. Elizabeth Graue
title Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
title_short Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
title_full Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
title_fullStr Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
title_full_unstemmed Local control in the era of accountability: A case study of Wisconsin preK
title_sort local control in the era of accountability: a case study of wisconsin prek
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2016-05-01
description The opposing principles of local control and increased standardization are a prominent tension in the United States’ education system. Since at least the early 1990s, this tension has taken shape around the accountability movement, defined by educational reforms that hold schools, teachers, and students accountable for performance on new standards, assessments, and curricula. While many scholars have examined the manifestations of the current accountability movement, few have looked at this phenomenon within the growing public preK movement. Drawing from interviews with state policymakers and district-level actors, this paper describes how the seemingly contradictory principles of local control and increased state and national standards (what we refer to simply as standardization) are shaping the policy and practice of Wisconsin’s preK system, known as 4K. We argue that rational models of policy making fail to explain the coexistence and blending of the strands of local control and standardization we found in our data, and suggest that Deborah Stone’s (2001) policy paradox provides a better theoretical framework for our findings.
topic PreK policy
Wisconsin
early childhood education
local control
standardization
policy paradox
accountability
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2366
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