| The Politics of Knowledge |
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| Why Research Does (or Does Not) Influence Education Policy |
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| Start: |
Monday, May 21, 2007
9:00 AM
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| End: |
Monday, May 21, 2007
6:00 PM
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| Location: |
Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 Directions to AEI |
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Today, increasing attention is being paid to the importance and rigor of education research, which includes data collection and case studies of teaching practices, student achievement, and education policy. The No Child Left Behind Act’s call for interventions based on “scientifically based research,” the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002, and a flood of data on student achievement have raised hopes that education research’s day has finally come. These rising expectations have been coupled with an influx of sophisticated research designs, yielding a growing body of research that dramatically expands what is known in the fields of teacher quality, school choice, and reading, among others. Nonetheless, there is frustration among researchers and reformers that this research too rarely influences policy or public understanding, and is too often twisted by advocates to suit their particular aims. At the same time, changes in research institutions, technology, and research funding have upended the ways in which research findings are communicated, thus offering new opportunities--but also raising concerns about how research is monitored, evaluated, and consumed.
AEI resident scholar and director of education policy studies Frederick M. Hess has commissioned eleven papers to examine how and why high-quality research influences policy, how research is used (or misused) in core policy areas, and how education research is consumed by key audiences. Please join us as AEI hosts a conference at which panelists will present their findings on education research and explore their implications for school improvement. Researchers and discussants will suggest how incentives and institutions can be altered to encourage rigorous research and its proper use, while recognizing its limits.
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8:30 a.m. |
Registration |
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| 9:00 |
Introduction: |
Frederick M. Hess, AEI |
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9:10 |
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Panel I: The Evolving Relationship between Research and Policy |
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Presenters: |
Jeffrey Henig, Columbia University Teachers College |
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Andrew Rudalevige, Dickinson College |
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Discussants: |
Gina Burkhardt, Learning Point Associates
Michael Feuer, National Research Council |
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Ellen Condliffe Lagemann, Harvard University |
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10:35 |
Break |
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10:45 |
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Panel II: How Research Is Used—Teacher Quality and Reading |
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Presenters: |
Richard Ingersoll, University of Pennsylvania |
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James Kim, Harvard Graduate School of Education |
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Discussants: |
Reid Lyon, Higher Ed Holdings and Whitney International University |
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Lorraine McDonnell, University of California, Santa Barbara |
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12:00 p.m. |
Luncheon |
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12:45 p.m. |
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Panel III: How Research Is Used—NCLB and School Choice |
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Presenters: |
Michael J. Petrilli, Thomas B. Fordham Foundation |
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Andrew Rotherham, Education Sector |
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Discussants: |
David Driscoll, Massachusetts Commissioner of Education |
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Roberto Rodriguez, United States Senate HELP Committee |
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2:00 |
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2:10 |
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Panel IV: How Research Is Used by the Public, the Courts, and Educational Leaders |
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Presenters: |
Lance Fusarelli, North Carolina State University |
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Joshua Dunn, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs |
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Pascal Forgione, Austin Independent School District |
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William Howell, University of Chicago |
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Warren Simmons, Annenberg Institute for School Reform |
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3:30 |
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3:40 |
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Panel V: Changing the Incentives for Researchers and Decision-Makers |
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Presenters: |
Dan Goldhaber, University of Washington |
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Kenneth Wong, Brown University |
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Discussants: |
Michael McPherson, Spencer Foundation |
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Kathleen McCartney, Harvard Graduate School of Education |
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Grover J. (Russ) Whitehurst, Institute of Education Sciences |
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5:10 |
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6:00 |
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More Information
Juliet Squire 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20036 Phone: 202-862-5843 E-mail: jsquire@aei.org
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Media Inquiries
Veronique Rodman American Enterprise Institute 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20036 Phone: 202-862-4870 E-mail: VRodman@aei.org
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| AEI Print Index No. 21698 |
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| Related Material |
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| Related Links |
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