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acculturation  The acquisition of the dominant culture's norms by a member of the nondominant culture. The nondominant culture typically loses its own culture, language, and sometimes religion in this process.
Americanization  The acculturation of American norms and values.
charter school  A group of teachers, parents, and even businesses may petition a local school board, or state government, to form a charter school which is exempt from many state and local regulations. Designed to promote creative new schools, the charter represents legal permission to try new approaches to educate students. First charter legislation was passed in Minnesota in 1991.
distance learning  Courses, programs, and training provided to students over long distances through television, the Internet, and other technologies.
Edison Schools (Edison Project)  An educational company that contracts with local school districts, promising to improve student achievement while making a profit in the process.
educational vouchers  Flat grants or payments representing the cost of educating a student at a school. Awarded to the parent or child to enable free choice of a school–public or private–the voucher payment is made to the school that accepts the child.
EMO (Educational Maintenance Organization)  The term is borrowed from Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) and refers to the growing number of profit-driven companies in the business of public education.
five factor theory  School effectiveness research emphasizes five factors, including effective leadership, monitoring student progress, safety, a clear vision, and high expectations.
full service school  These schools provide a network of social services from nutrition and health care to parental education and transportation, all designed to support the comprehensive educational needs of children.
home schooling  A growing trend (but a longtime practice) of parents educating their children at home, for religious or philosophical reasons.
ideologues  Home school advocates focused on avoiding public schools in order to impart their own set of values.
magnet school  A specialized school open to all students in a district on a competitive or lottery basis. It provides a method of drawing children away from segregated neighborhood schools while affording unique educational specialties, such as science, math, and the performing arts.
norm-referenced tests  Tests that compare individual students with others in a designated norm group.
objective-referenced tests  Tests that measure whether students have mastered a designated body of knowledge rather than how they compare with other students in a norm group.
open enrollment  The practice of permitting students to attend the school of their choice within their school system. It is sometimes associated with magnet schools and desegregation efforts.
pedagogues  Term given to home school advocates motivated by humanistic rather than religious goals.
privatization  The movement toward increased private sector, for-profit involvement in the management of public agencies, including schools.
reconstructionism (reconstructionist)  Also called social reconstructionism, this is a view of education as a way to improve the quality of life, to reduce the chances of conflict, and to create a more humane world.
school choice  The name given to several programs in which parents choose what school their child will attend.
service credit  By volunteering in a variety of community settings, from nursing homes to child care facilities, students are encouraged to develop a sense of community and meet what is now a high school graduation requirement in some states.
Tesseract  Formerly Educational Alternatives, this private company works in the public school sector, attempting to improve school efficiency and student achievement, while making a profit.







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