ArthurG. F. K., and MiltonS.1991. “The Florida Teacher Incentive Program: A Policy Analysis,”Educational Policy, 5(3): 266–278.
2.
Brizius & Foster and State Policy Research, Inc.1993. States in Profile.Alexandria, VA: State Policy Research, Inc.
3.
Carnegie Forum for Education and the Economy.1986. A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the 21st Century.New York: NY: Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy.
4.
CastorB.1990. Speech delivered to Florida Council of 100. Tallahassee, FL.
5.
CistoneP. J., FernandezJ. A., and TornilloP. L.Jr.1989. “School-Based Management/Shared Decision Making in Dade County (Miami),”Education and Urban Society, 21(4): 393–402.
6.
CollinsR. A., and HansonM. K.1991. “Summative Evaluation Report School-Based Management/Shared Decision-Making Project: 1987–1988 through 1989–90.”Miami, FL: Dade County Public Schools, Office of Educational Accountability.
7.
CubanL.1984. “School Reform by Remote Control: SB813 in California,”Phi Delta Kappan, 65(9).
8.
DeLacyJ.1992. The Bellevue Evaluation Study (2nd report). Seattle: University of Washington, Institute for the Study of Educational Policy.
9.
DyeT. R.1989. Public Education in Florida: A Comparative Perspective.Tallahassee, FL: Policy Sciences Program.
10.
FiedlerT., and KempelM.1993. The Miami Herald Almanac of Florida Politics 1994.Miami: The Miami Herald Publishing Company.
11.
FirestoneW. A.1990. “Continuity and Incrementalism After All: State Responses to the Excellence Movement,” In The Educational Reform Movement of the 1980s: Perspectives and Cases, MurphyJ., ed., Berkeley, CA: McCrutchan.
12.
FirestoneW. A., FuhrmanS. H., and KirstM. W.1989. The Progress of Reform: An Appraisal of State Education Initiatives.New Brunswick, NJ: Center for Policy Research in Education.
13.
Florida House of Representatives.1990. Save Our Children Now.Tallahassee, FL: Office of the Speaker and Office of the President, Florida Legislature.
14.
FrancisW. L.1991. “The Florida Legislature and the Legislative Process,” In Government and Politics in Florida, HuckshornR. J., ed., Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.
15.
FuhrmanS. (Ed.). 1993. Designing Coherent Education Policy: Improving the System.San Francisco: The Jossey-Bass Publishers.
16.
FuhrmanS. H.1989. “State Politics and Education Reform,” In The Politics of Reforming School Administration, HannawayJ., and CrowsonR., eds., Philadelphia, PA: Falma.
17.
GarmsW., GuthrieJ., and PierceL.1978. School Finance: The, Economics and Politics of Public Education, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
18.
GuthrieJ.1987. “Foreword”Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 9(2): 5–11.
19.
HeiseJ. A., GladwinH., and McLaughenD.1992. 1992 FIU/Florida Poll.Miami, FL: Florida International University Press.
20.
HerringtonC. D. In press. “Learning in the Sunshine State: Increasing Stress, Escalating Scrutiny,” In The Future of Florida, A. Mabe, ed.
21.
HerringtonC. D.1991. Condition of Children in Florida.Tallahassee, FL: Center for Policy Studies in Education.
22.
HerringtonC. D., JohnsonB., and O'FarrellM.1991. “Twenty Years of Accountability Legislation in Florida,”Tallahassee, FL: Learning Systems Institute.
23.
HerringtonC. D., and NakibY.1992. “Fiscal Stress and Educational Reform in Florida,” In Bridge Over Troubled Waters: The State of the States ‘92, WestbrookK., ed., Chicago, IL: Loyola University.
24.
HuckshornR. J. (Ed.). 1991. Government and Politics in Florida.Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.
25.
JohnsonB. L. In press. “In Search of a Coherent Policy of Reform: A Longitudinal Examination of Educational Reform in Utah,”International Journal of Educational Reform.
26.
MalenB., OgawaR., and KranzJ.1990. “What Do We Know About School-Based Mangement? A Case Study of the Literature,” In Choice and Control in American Education, CluneW., & WitteJ., eds., New York: Falmer, 2: 289–342.
27.
MarshallC., MitchellD., and WirtF.1989. Culture and Education Policy.Bristol, PA: Falmer Press
28.
McCloskeyG. N., ProvenzoE.Jr., CohnM. M., and KottkampR. B.1991. “Disincentives to Teaching: Teacher Reactions to Legislated Learning,”Educational Policy5(3): 251–265.
29.
National Association of State Budget Officers.1993. “The Fiscal Survey of the States,”Washington, DC: National Governor's Association.
30.
OddenA.1991. “New Patterns of Education Policy Implementation and Challenges to the 1990s,” In Education Policy Implementation, OddenA., ed., Albany, NY: State University of New York.
31.
OsborneD.1990. Laboratories of Democracy.Boston, MA: Harvard.
32.
RobinsonJ. A., and StormR. M.1991. “Plural Executives: Florida's Governor and Cabinet,” In Government and Politics in Florida, HuckshornR. J., ed., Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.
33.
SmithM. S., and O'DayJ.1991. “Systemic School Reform,” InThe Politics of Curriculum and Testing.Bristol, PA: Farmer.
34.
TimarT.1985. “The Politics of School Restructuring,” In Education Politics for the New Century, MitchellD., and GoertzP., eds., Bristol, PA: Falmer.
35.
TurnbullA.1981. “Florida,” In Shaping Education Policy in the States, FuhrmanS., and RosenthalA., eds., Cambridge, MA: Institute for Educational Leadership.
36.
WenzelL.1992. Restructuring in Florida: The History of An Educational Reform Policy. Unpublished dissertation, Florida State University.
37.
WestC. T.1990. “State Issues and Regional Economics,” In The Economy of Florida: 1990, DenslowD., PierceA., and ShermyenA., eds., Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.
38.
WeissC., CamboneJ., & WyethA.1992. “Trouble in Paradise: Teacher Conflicts in Shared Decision-Making,”Educational Administration Quarterly, 28, 350–367.