De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Behave av Robert M Sapolsky (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 599 kr"An outstanding book . . . full of riches."Daily Kos "The book's analyses of what are the limits and dangers of our current fascination with markets, testing, blaming and shaming teachers, anti-union sentiment, and similar things are powerfully stated. But just as importantly in terms of the role of 'public intellectual' efforts, they are refreshingly free of the kinds of overly academic artifice that is all too common in such critical work."Education Review "Most of the fire in the national debate over school reform has come from those in favor of high-stakes testing of students, charter schools, and weakening of teachers' unionsuntil now. The very timely essays in Public Education Under Siege challenge the assumptions and goals of the so-called school reform movement. If you want to understand why the movement will not bring serious change to the schools that need it most and may even make things worse, read this book. This is an extraordinarily valuable contribution to the national debate."Michael K. Brown, Race, Money and the American Welfare State
Michael B. Katz is Walter H. Annenberg Professor of History and Research Associate of the Population Studies Center at the University of Pennsylvania. He is also author of Why Don't American Cities Burn? and The Price of Citizenship: Redefining the American Welfare State, both available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Mike Rose is Professor at the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Back to School: Why Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Education.
Introduction PART I. THE PERILS OF TECHNOCRATIC EDUCATIONAL REFORM Chapter 1. The Mismeasure of Teaching and Learning: How Contemporary School Reform Fails the Test Mike Rose Chapter 2. Views from the Black of the Math Classroom Joi A. Spencer Chapter 3. Targeting Teachers David F. Labaree Chapter 4. Firing Line: The Grand Coalition Against Teachers Joanne Barkan Chapter 5. The Bipartisan, and Unfounded, Assault on Teachers' Unions Richard D. Kahlenberg Chapter 6. Free-Market Think Tanks and the Marketing of Education Policy Kevin G. Welner Chapter 7. The Price of Human Capital: The Illusion of Equal Educational Opportunity Harvey Kantor and Robert Lowe Chapter 8. Educational Movements, Not Market Moments Janelle Scott PART II. EDUCATION, RACE, AND POVERTY Chapter 9. Public Education as Welfare Michael B. Katz Chapter 10. In Search of Equality in School Finance Reform Pamela Barnhouse Walters, Jean C. Robinson, and Julia C. Lamber Chapter 11. "I Want the White People Here!": The Dark Side of an Urban School Renaissance Maia Cucchiara Chapter 12. The Rhetoric of Choice: Segregation, Desegregation, and Charter Schools Ansley T. Erickson Chapter 13. Criminalizing Kids: The Overlooked Reason for Failing Schools Heather Ann Thompson PART III. ALTERNATIVES TO TECHNOCRATIC REFORM Chapter 14. Abandoning the Higher Purposes of Public Schools Deborah Meier Chapter 15. Equity-Minded Instructional Leadership: Turning Up the Volume for English Learners Tina Trujillo and Sarah Woulfin Chapter 16. Professional Unionism: Redefining the Role of Teachers and Their Unions in Reform Efforts Claire Robertson-Kraft Chapter 17. Pushing Back: How an Environmental Charter School Resisted Test-Driven Pressures Paul Skilton-Sylvester Chapter 18. The Achievement Gap and the Schools We Need: Creating the Conditions Where Race and Class No Longer Predict Student Achievement Pedro Noguera Chapter 19. !Ya Basta! Challenging Restrictions on English-Language Learners Eugene E. Garcia Chapter 20. Sharing Responsibility: A Case for Real Parent-School Partnerships Rema Reynolds and Tyrone C. Howard Chapter 21. Calling the Shots in Public Education: Parents, Politicians, and Educators Clash Eva Gold, Jeffrey R. Henig, and Elaine Simon PART IV. CONCLUSIONS Chapter 22. What Is Education Reform? Michael B. Katz and Mike Rose Chapter 23. A Letter to Young Teachers: The Graduation Speech You Won't Hear, But Should Mike Rose List of Contributors Acknowledgments