Initial Position
Even before the accountability reform kicks in, some subjects start out positioned favorably within the schooling system. They have high status and high levels of agreement on what the subject is, what should be taught, and even, in some subjects, how the subject should be taught (Goodson 1993; Siskin 1994). Math, for example, commands a relatively high status position, and is considered to have a relatively tight paradigm (agreement and coherence about what counts as knowledge). As one math teacher explained, “every math teacher” across the country knows what should be known in algebra II: “Algebra II, you have to do certain things, and every math teacher knows that when you're done with Algebra II you know these things.”
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Accountability in Tested and Untested Subjects
Standards-based accountability policies entered the public schooling system at the end of the twentieth century as a major reform effort, one that has the potential to dramatically change the face and function of the comprehensive high school. For the past hundred years, the pattern of high school change has mainly been one of enrollment growth. In the middle of that period, the Conant Report (1959) posed the primary challenge to high school organization: could high schools accommodate the “horde of heterogeneous students that has descended on our secondary schools” (p. 602)? To do so, high schools would grow not only in size but in structure, offering a widely differentiated array of courses aimed at the “heterogeneous” tastes and talents of diverse students, and organizing teachers and content into discrete departments.
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Assessment and Accountability in Action (Vermont)
Vermont
 
The Conditions of Assessment and Accountability Vermont anchors one end of our accountability sample. It has a small population, with fewer than 600,000 people (the 49th largest state), and slightly more than 100,000 students in its 350 schools. It is a state of small towns and rural areas. Its largest city, Burlington, has less than 40,000 people. Sprinkled among the state's 285 school districts are some sixty supervisory unions-multi-district administrative units for small or single-school districts-and a number of academies-nominally private schools that provide schooling for students in towns that pay tuition in lieu of running their own schools.
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