Achieving Equity and Excellence. Douglas Reeves
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Achieving Equity and Excellence - Douglas Reeves страница
Achieving Equity & Excellence
Immediate Results From the Lessons of High-Poverty, High-Success Schools
DOUGLAS REEVES
Copyright © 2020 by Solution Tree Press
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction of this book in whole or in part in any form.
555 North Morton Street
Bloomington, IN 47404
800.733.6786 (toll free) / 812.336.7700
FAX: 812.336.7790
email: [email protected]
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Reeves, Douglas B., 1953- author.
Title: Achieving equity and excellence : immediate results from the lessons of high-poverty, high-success schools / Douglas Reeves.
Description: Bloomington, IN : Solution Tree Press, [2019] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019024086 (print) | LCCN 2019024087 (ebook) | ISBN 9781949539431 (paperback) | ISBN 9781949539448 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Educational equalization. | Academic achievement. | Low-income students. | Educational accountability. | School improvement programs.
Classification: LCC LC213 .R44 2019 (print) | LCC LC213 (ebook) | DDC 379.2/6--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019024086
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019024087
Solution Tree
Jeffrey C. Jones, CEO
Edmund M. Ackerman, President
Solution Tree Press
President and Publisher: Douglas M. Rife
Associate Publisher: Sarah Payne-Mills
Art Director: Rian Anderson
Managing Production Editor: Kendra Slayton
Production Editor: Alissa Voss
Content Development Specialist: Amy Rubenstein
Copy Editor: Evie Madsen
Proofreader: Sarah Ludwig
Text and Cover Designer: Laura Cox
Editorial Assistant: Sarah Ludwig
For Amy and Mary
Acknowledgments
My debts are too numerous to mention, but I will nevertheless attempt at least a few. To Rick and Becky DuFour, for their friendship, challenging intellect, and standard of excellence, which guide me daily to be a better teacher, leader, and writer. To Robert Eaker, for a model of friendship and intellectual rigor—he is what I want to be when I grow up. To the Solution Tree team, with whom I have collaborated for close to two decades—Jeff Jones, chief executive officer, and Douglas Rife, publisher, exemplify what partnership means, consistently elevating the interests of the teachers, leaders, and students whom they serve above short-term business considerations. Alissa Voss provided detailed and constructive feedback that made this a better book than if it had been left to my efforts alone.
I owe a special intellectual debt to Karin Chenoweth, for whom footnotes and reference citations are woefully inadequate recognitions of her seminal contribution to the scholarship of success in high-poverty schools. Robert Pondiscio writes with courage and eloquence, and challenges everyone who researches and writes about equity and excellence to put ourselves in the shoes of students and parents. Anthony Muhammad and Luis Cruz have influenced my understanding of the role of culture in schools of every socioeconomic status. Michael Fullan reminds me that fundamental truths in education transcend time and international boundaries. My colleagues at Creative Leadership Solutions have been my friends and intellectual inspirations. They include Lisa Almeida, Kate Anderson Foley, Brandon Doubek, Tony Flach, Lauren Mahoney, Kim Marshall, Brian McNulty, Stacy Scott, Mike Wasta, and many others. Special thanks to Allison Wedell, whose assistance in research and editing were vital to the completion of this book. To Julie Reeves who, in her 96th year, continues to research and write original papers on Abraham Lincoln, tend her garden, provide love and encouragement for generations of family and friends, and model the admonition of Saint Augustine to preach the Gospel at all times and when necessary, use words; her every act of kindness and generosity is worth a lifetime of sermons.
While I am happy to share credit, I do not share blame for the inevitable errors, omissions, and other failures. The only worse thing than failing to publish is to publish and then be held to public account for these mistakes, a burden I happily accept alone.
—Douglas Reeves, Boston, Massachusetts
Solution Tree Press would like to thank the following reviewers:
Carrie Barnett
Instructional Coach
San Jacinto Unified School District
San Jacinto, California
Jonathan Cornue
Staff and Curriculum Development
Madison-Oneida Board of Cooperative Educational Services
Verona, New York
Michael Giromini
Principal
Royal Oak High School
Royal Oak, Michigan
Andy Pattee
Superintendent
Cedar Falls Community School District
Cedar Falls, Iowa
Brad Randmark
Assistant Principal
Burnham School
Cicero,