Too Simple to Fail presents a startling dissection of what is wrong with our educational system and a set of simple, common-sense steps for improving it. This simplicity, Bausell argues, characterizes both the schooling process and the science of education, as witnessed by legions of researchers who have discovered precious little that their grandmothers didn't already know. Yet surprisingly, based upon the author's own studies and a review of the past 30+ years of educational research, these discoveries boil down to a simple but powerful theory: The only way schools can increase learning is to increase the amount of relevant instructional time for all students. Here, Bausell demonstrates that classroom instruction is hopelessly obsolete, as are our current testing practices, both contributing to the widening opportunity gap between socioeconomic and racial groups. But with an understanding of what is wrong with education today comes the revelation that the answer to these deficiencies has been available to us all along in the form of the tutorial model, the most effective instructional paradigm ever developed. Only in recent years has it become feasible to simulate this extremely effective instructional medium as a universal option that, in effect, would allow schools to provide relevant instruction as a rule and not an exception. If implemented, a new world of opportunity and potential will finally be available to children, whose learning is so crucial for our future.The new model presented in this book has implications for identifying not only what is wrong with the way we educate our young, but also why it is wrong, and how the educational process can be made more efficient, effective, and fair.
Author(s): R. Barker Bausell
Edition: 1
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 257
CONTENTS......Page 8
INTRODUCTION: Obsolete from Every Perspective......Page 10
CHAPTER 1 The Science of Learning......Page 18
CHAPTER 2 Dueling Theories......Page 48
CHAPTER 3 Dueling Political Perspectives......Page 64
CHAPTER 4 The Theory of Relevant Instructional Time......Page 72
CHAPTER 5 The Science of What Could Be......Page 88
CHAPTER 6 The Theoretical Importance of Tutoring and the Learning Laboratory......Page 108
CHAPTER 7 Demystifying the Curriculum......Page 122
CHAPTER 8 Using Tests Designed to Assess School-based Learning......Page 148
CHAPTER 9 11 Strategies for Increasing School Learning......Page 176
CHAPTER 10 Toward a More Focused Science of Education......Page 196
CHAPTER 11 Implications for Reducing Racial Disparities in School Learning......Page 218
CHAPTER 12 Getting There From Here......Page 226
NOTES......Page 232
C......Page 254
J......Page 255
S......Page 256
Y......Page 257