In Schools We Trust
In Schools We Trust is a book written by Deborah Meier and published on August 1, 2002. Meier uses her experiences as the founding principal of the Mission Hill School in Boston, and previous experiences leading the Central Park East schools in New York, to illustrate her vision for school reform in America. The book is broken down into three sections that focus first on the importance of building trust among the various constituencies in schools, then the challenge or threat that high-stakes standardized testing presents to building trust in schools, and finally, a broader vision for how particular systemic and policy changes could be made to increase the likelihood that schools build the trust that is necessary for schools to be effective.
primaryTopic
In Schools We Trust
In Schools We Trust is a book written by Deborah Meier and published on August 1, 2002. Meier uses her experiences as the founding principal of the Mission Hill School in Boston, and previous experiences leading the Central Park East schools in New York, to illustrate her vision for school reform in America. The book is broken down into three sections that focus first on the importance of building trust among the various constituencies in schools, then the challenge or threat that high-stakes standardized testing presents to building trust in schools, and finally, a broader vision for how particular systemic and policy changes could be made to increase the likelihood that schools build the trust that is necessary for schools to be effective.
has abstract
In Schools We Trust is a book ...... y for schools to be effective.
@en
author
ISBN
978-0-8070-3142-1
literary genre
number of pages
publisher
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
31,527,520
Wikipage revision ID
728,794,618
country
language
release date
publisher
Beacon Press
subject
hypernym
comment
In Schools We Trust is a book ...... y for schools to be effective.
@en
label
In Schools We Trust
@en
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
In Schools We Trust
@en