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Book Reviews May 10, 2019

Reclaiming Accountability in Teacher Education

Elizabeth Yomantas, Pepperdine University

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Author
Cochran-Smith, Marilyn; Cummings Carney, Molly; Stringer Keefe, Elizabeth; Burton, Stephani; Chang, Wen-Chia; Fern√°ndez, M. Beatriz; Miller, Andrew F.; S√°nchez,Juan Gabriel; Baker, Megina
Date Reviewed
June 21, 2021
Reviewer
Elizabeth Yomantas
Teacher accountability has been a major strategy for “fixing” education for the last 2 decades. In this book, Cochran-Smith and her research team argue that it is time for teacher educators to reclaim accountability by adopting a new approach that features intelligent professional responsibility, challenges the structures and processes that reproduce inequity, and sustains multi-layered collaboration with diverse communities. The authors analyze and critique major accountability initiatives, including Department of Education regulations, CAEP accreditation procedures, NCTQ teacher preparation reviews, and edTPA, and expose the lack of evidence behind these policies, as well as the negative impact they are having on teacher education. However, the book does not conclude that accountability is the wrong direction for the next generation of teacher education. Instead, the authors offer a clear and achievable vision of accountability for teacher education based on a commitment to equity and democracy. (From the Publisher)