PULLMAN, Wash.– Donald C. Orlich, professor emeritus of education at Washington State University, has published ”School Reform: The Great American Brain Robbery,” which discusses the educational system in the nation and in Washington State in the wake of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act and standardized testing in schools.
“School Reform” criticizes current school reform efforts, in large part because of the emphasis on standardized testing. Orlich said that “testing madness” yields invalid and unreliable measures of student achievement and helps subsidize private testing companies.
The book’s target audience includes parents, educators and the general public, Orlich said.
“The WASL and all high-stakes tests discriminate against the poor, children of color and disabled children,” he said. “The Thomas B. Fordham Institute gives the state of
Orlich’s book compares state and federal data on test results, analyzes questions given to students and cites a variety of studies conducted over the years. He writes about the cost of meeting federal mandates, inconsistencies in standardized tests, errors in computing scores and questions that he believes are class-biased.
Orlich said the key to effective school reform is to determine what needs fixing and then prepare a plan. He proposes a system similar to the one in
“My primary purpose in writing this book was to show that at the state and national levels political policy-makers are simply stumbling through educational reform based on a market-driven political ideology and a very serious attempt to privatize the nation’s public schools. The NCLB violates the Tenth Amendment to our great Constitution. Public education is a state’s right, not a federal right,” he said.
Orlich received a bachelor’s degree in education from the
