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cloth 1-59213-905-1 $69.50, Apr 09, Available
paper 1-59213-906-X $26.95, Apr 09, Available
222 pp
5.5x8.25
1 table 2 map(s) 1 figure 1 halftone
"The novelty of Objectifying Measures is the clarity with which an analysis of statistical discourse is mapped out to show its complex relationship to inequality. Johnson offers a reader-friendly ethnography that demands attention... Her analysis of assumptions and biases which frame and inform standardized testing as a method of defining and measuring failure/progress is timely and important. Highly recommended!"
Katya Gibel Mevorach, Associate Professor, Anthropology Department & American Studies Concentration at Grinnell College
In the past twenty years, the number of educational tests with high-stakes consequencessuch as promotion to the next grade level or graduating from high schoolhas increased. At the same time, the difficulty of the tests has also increased. In Texas, a Latina state legislator introduced and lobbied for a bill that would take such factors as teacher recommendations, portfolios of student work, and grades into account for the studentsusually students of colorwho failed such tests. The bill was defeated.
Using several types of ethnographic study (personal interviews, observations of the Legislature in action, news broadcasts, public documents from the Legislature and Texas Education Agency), Amanda Walker Johnson observed the struggle for the bill’s passage. Through recounting this experience, Objectifying Measures explores the relationship between the cultural production of scientific knowledge (of statistics in particular) and the often intuitive resistance to objectification of those adversely affected by the power of policies underwritten as "scientific."
Excerpt available at www.temple.edu/tempress
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Contextualizing Education within the Racial Politics of Texas
3. Statistical Objectification, Governmentality, and Race in High- Stakes Testing
4. Commodification, Privatization, and Political Economy of Statistical Discourse
5. Statistical Objectification, Truth, and Hegemony
6. Between Women and the State of Texas: Representation and the Politics of Experience
7. Conclusion
Chronology: Timeline of Testing in Texas, 1970– 2003
Notes
Bibliography
Index
![]() | Amanda Walker Johnson is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. |
Education
Race and Ethnicity
Community Organizing and Social Movements
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