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School: The Story of American Public Education »

Book cover image of School: The Story of American Public Education by Sarah Mondale

Authors: Sarah Mondale (Editor), Meryl Streep, Sarah B. Patton (Editor), Sarah Modale (Editor), David Tyack
ISBN-13: 9780807042212, ISBN-10: 0807042218
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Beacon
Date Published: August 2002
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Sarah Mondale

Book Synopsis

This text is a companion volume to the four-part PBS documentary series of the same name. Essays by five historians of American education examine the history of the American public school system, from colonial times to the present. They consider a variety of issues faced by educators, parents, politicians and voters over the decades, including state versus local control, educating non-English speakers, specialized vocational tracks, approaches to school integration, the use of intelligence and standardized tests to assess academic potential, the challenges to providing the same quality of education to districts of varying socio-economic levels. Serious writing, but accessible to general readers interested in public education.

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Publishers Weekly

Chronologically arranged in four sections (1770-1890, 1900-1950, 1950-1980, 1980-2000), this anthology covers much ground (charter, common, frontier and dame schools) at a brisk, engaging pace. These five eminent scholars catalogue the experiences of African-Americans, Catholics, Native Americans, Mexican-Americans, people with disabilities and girls in an educational system originally designed for Protestant white boys. Tyack and company nimbly chart changing educational philosophies (Horace Mann, John Dewey, the Gary Plan, Archbishop John Hughes) and public debates, such as those aroused by the introduction of IQ tests in the 1920s, the 1957 launching of Sputnik (prompting fear that Soviet education outshone U.S. education) and the 1983 publication of A Nation at Risk, an assessment of the state of public education by "a presidential commission of corporate and public leaders and educators." And there are surprises "black literacy soared in the decades after the Civil War, from 5 percent to 70 percent"; "New York's English-only curriculum was radical" in the 1910s; in the 1930s two-thirds of Los Angeles's Mexican-American students were classified as "slow learners... even mentally retarded" after the introduction of IQ tests; Lyndon Johnson was a schoolteacher; and in 1970 women received "less than 1 percent of all medical and legal degrees." This exemplary, thoroughly readable account of a "complex and controversial and open-ended" subject is enhanced by 125-plus photos and illustrations. (Sept. 12) Forecast: This companion to the PBS documentary series will attract a significant readership. Though balanced, it will stir controversy at a time when reform leans toward business modelsand Horace Mann's belief "that all citizens" are responsible for the education of all children is being challenged. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Table of Contents

ForewordIX
Introduction1
Part 11770-1900 The Common School11
The Educated Citigen19
Part 21900-1950 As American As Public School63
"You Are an American"71
Part 31950-1980 Separate and Unequal123
"Why Don't You Go to School with Us?"131
Part 41980-2000 The Bottom Line173
A nation at Risk?183
Acknowledgments215
Bibliography219
About the Authors223
Index225
Photo Credits237
Film Credits241

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