"Every library with serious contemporary affairs or education collections will want this intelligent book."—C. A. Cunningham, University of Chicago ". . . . This book does something that is unique in our headlong rush to change, reform, punish, or criticize education. Its thoughtful essays pause and reflect on what public education means in America. . . . [<i>Reconstructing the Common Good in Education</i>] is relevant for both historians and those in education policy. . . .[It] provides useful ideas and material for both."—<i>American Studies International</i>

For almost two centuries, Americans expected that their public schools would cultivate the personal, moral, and social development of individual students, create citizens, and bind diverse groups into one nation. Since the 1980s, however, a new generation of school reformers has been intent on using schools to solve the nation's economic problems. An economic justification for public schools—equipping students with marketable skills to help the nation compete in a global, information-based workplace—overwhelmed other historically accepted purposes for tax-supported public schools.

Private sector management has become the model for public school systems as schools and districts are "downsized," "restructured," and "outsourced." Recent reform proposals have called for government-funded vouchers to send children to private schools, the creation of self-governing charter schools, the contracting of schools to private entrepreneurs, and the partnerships with the business community in promoting new information technologies. But if there is a shared national purpose for education, should it be oriented only toward enhancing the country's economic success? Is everything public for sale? Are the interests of individuals or selected groups overwhelming the common good that the founders of tax-supported public schools so fervently sought?

This volume explores the ongoing debates about what constitutes the common good in American public education, assessing the long-standing tensions between shared purposes and individual interests in schooling. It shows how recent school reform efforts, driven by economic concerns, have worsened the conflict between the legitimate interests of individuals and society as a whole, and demonstrates that reconstructing the common good envisioned by the founders of public education in the United States remains essential and unfinished work.

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For two centuries, Americans expected that their public schools would cultivate personal, moral, and social development, however, modern school reformers are intent on using schools to solve economic problems. This text explores the ongoing debates on the commongood in American public education.
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Foreword Patricia Albjerg Graham; Introduction Larry Cuban and Dorothy Shipps; Part I. Ways of Seeing the Common Good in Public Education: The Past Informing the Present: 1. Public schools and the elusive search for the common good William J. Reese; 2. Turning points: reconstruction and the growth of national influence in education Ted Mitchell; 3. 'The is no escape ... from the ogre of indoctrination': George Counts and the civic dilemmas of democratic educators Daniel Perlstein; 4. 'No one here to put us down': hispano education in a Southern Colorado community, 1920-1963 Ruben Donato; 5. Echoes of corporate influence: managing away urban school troubles Dorothy Shipps; Part II. Ways of Seeing the Common Good in Public Education: Social and Political Implications: 6. No exit: public education as an inescapably public good David F. Labaree; 7. Bureaucracy left and right: thinking about the one best system Harvey Kantor and Robert Lowe; 8. Why is it so hard to get 'good' schools? Larry Cuban; Part III. Uncommon Ways of Seeing the Common Good: 9. Civic friendship: an aristotelian perspective Elisabeth Hansot; 10. Devotion and ambiguity in the struggles of a poor mother and her family: New York City, 1918-1919 Michael B. Katz; 11. Reflections on education as transcendence John Mayer; Afterword Dorothy Shipps and Larry Cuban; Notes; References; Index.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780804738637
Publisert
2000-05-01
Utgiver
Stanford University Press; Stanford University Press
Vekt
408 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
304

Om bidragsyterne

Larry Cuban is Professor of Education at Stanford University. He is the author, most recently, of How Scholars Trumped Teachers: Change Without Reform in University Curriculum, Teaching, and Research. Dorothy Shipps is Assistant Professor of Education at Teachers College, Columbia University.