Description
Book SynopsisThis book seeks answers to a fundamental question, perhaps one of the most important questions in America today: How can we help children born into poverty transcend their disadvantages and enter the middle class as adults? And in particular, what role can our schools play? There's little doubt that education and opportunity are tightly joined in the twenty-first-century economy. Almost every week brings a new study demonstrating that highly skilled workers are being rewarded with stronger pay and excellent working conditions, while Americans with few skills are struggling mightily. Expanding educational achievement, then, appears to be a clear route to expanding economic opportunity. Yet much of our public discourse ends there. Of course more young Americans need better education in order to succeed. But what kind of education? Is the goal college for all? What do we mean by college? Do our young people mostly need a strong foundation in academics? What about so-called non-cognitive s
Trade ReviewIn Education for Upward Mobility, Michael Petrilli, president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, assembles a team of contributors to tackle how we can help children born into poverty transcend their disadvantages. . . .Fortunately, the contributors review real and workable strategies to overcome these barriers. You may not agree with all the proposed solutions or models examined in this book, but you will be inspired by the great work being done to address the challenge. * School Administrator *
With this provocative volume, Mike Petrilli has rendered a real service. He and his contributors offer much-needed straight talk on what it means to promote educational opportunity and upward mobility. Whether one agrees with Petrilli’s recommendations or not, this timely volume is a valuable resource for policymakers, educators, and everyone else. -- Frederick M. Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute
It's an outrage that so many of our poorest children, particularly our poorest children of color will also face poverty as adults. A high quality education is not the only solution to this moral failure, but it can be a big part of improving the lives of individual children and hopefully THEIR families. This book gives people who are trying to reform education many concrete ideas for helping the children who need help the most have a fighting chance to change their life chances in America today. -- Howard Fuller, PhD, distinguished professor of education, director of the Institute for the Transformation of Learning, Marquette University
Table of ContentsIntroduction Part I: Transcending Poverty through Education, Work, and Personal Responsibility Chapter 1: “Education and the ‘Success Sequence,’” Ron Haskins Chapter 2: “Big Payoff, Low Probability: Postsecondary Education and Economic Mobility in America,” Andrew Kelly Chapter 3: “The Certification Revolution,” Tamar Jacoby Chapter 4: “How Apprenticeship Can Spur Upward Mobility in the United States,” Robert Lerman Part II: Multiple Pathways in High School: Tracking Revisited? Chapter 5: “Small High Schools of Choice,” Peter Meyer Chapter 6: “College Prep High Schools for the Poor,” Joanne Jacobs Chapter 7: “High Quality Career and Technical Education,” Robert Schwartz and Nancy Hoffman Part III: The Early Years Chapter 8: “Starting at Five is Too Late: Early Childhood Education and Upward Mobility,” Elliot Regenstein, Bryce Marable, and Jelene Britten Chapter 9: “Poverty-Fighting Elementary Schools: Knowledge Acquisition is Job One,” Robert Pondiscio Chapter 10: “Tracking in Middle School,” Tom Loveless Conclusion