Pedro Noguera has an excellent book review in the New York Times Book Review of Vicki Abeles’ new book “Beyond Measure.”

 

Vicki is the California mom who created the film “Race to Nowhere” about the pressures of high-stakes testing and how they were ruining children’s lives. She traveled all over the country, showing her film in community centers, churches, wherever she could find an audience.

 

Her new book shows how the “reforms” of the past generation have crushed students’ appetite for learning. Noguera praises it highly and says it will upset the education establishment. He says it is a subversive book that has the potential to upset the current creativity-killing reforms that are popular in Washington and state capitols, but not in schools.

 

The only error in his review is his reference to America’s alleged “slippage” on international tests. As I have demonstrated time and again, our students have never been no. 1 or no. 2 on international tests; typically, we have scored in the bottom quartile or at the median, not at the top. We have not slipped. This has been the case for fifty years. The low scores of the poorest students drag down our average. And besides, the international tests don’t predict anything anyway.

 

Nonetheless, it is a terrific review of an important book.