Description

Book Synopsis
Education as a major social movement is coming to an end. The End of School Reform derives its theoretical framework from the ideas of Hegel, who perceived an end to history, and Thomas Kuhn, who theorized that history does not follow a linear path but that the scientific landscape changes through large-scale movements called paradigm shifts. This book examines the partial successes of history''s three major educational reform movements (the Progressive Education movement at the beginning of the 20th century, the Equity Reform movement of the 1960''s-1970''s, and the Excellence Reform movement from 1983 to the present) and contends that such major movements in education will never be seen again. Blending Arthur Danto''s end of art, John Horgan''s end of science, and Francis Fukuyama''s end of history thesesall of which argue that only minor reforms will occur in the futureand drawing on interviews of education historians and policy professors, the end of school reform thesis maintains

Trade Review
A challenging provocation. * Future Survey, August 2007 *
Mindful of the varied factors that have shaped and continue to shape American educational reform, Maurice and Clair Berube have written one of the most insightful well-researched and interesting works on the nature of education reform, past, present and future. Based, in part, from interviews with the most critical observers in the field (Giroux, Ravitch, Apple, among others), the authors have not only placed current debates about the achievement gap and effects of poverty in historical perspective, but have raised provocative questions about the very future of American education. Echoing Boyd Bode's astute obsevation that the 'problem of education is a problem of direction,' the authors offer readers some guideposts. -- Jeffrey Glanz, Wagner College

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 The End of School Reform Chapter 2 Three Major Movements—And No More Chapter 3 The Death of Progressive Education Chapter 4 The Limits of Educating the Poor Chapter 5 The Trouble with National Standards Chapter 6 The End of Public Schools? Chapter 7 A New Direction

The End of School Reform

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    A Hardback by Maurice R. Berube, Clair T. Berube

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
      Publication Date: 12/13/2006 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780742539464, 978-0742539464
      ISBN10: 0742539466

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Education as a major social movement is coming to an end. The End of School Reform derives its theoretical framework from the ideas of Hegel, who perceived an end to history, and Thomas Kuhn, who theorized that history does not follow a linear path but that the scientific landscape changes through large-scale movements called paradigm shifts. This book examines the partial successes of history''s three major educational reform movements (the Progressive Education movement at the beginning of the 20th century, the Equity Reform movement of the 1960''s-1970''s, and the Excellence Reform movement from 1983 to the present) and contends that such major movements in education will never be seen again. Blending Arthur Danto''s end of art, John Horgan''s end of science, and Francis Fukuyama''s end of history thesesall of which argue that only minor reforms will occur in the futureand drawing on interviews of education historians and policy professors, the end of school reform thesis maintains

      Trade Review
      A challenging provocation. * Future Survey, August 2007 *
      Mindful of the varied factors that have shaped and continue to shape American educational reform, Maurice and Clair Berube have written one of the most insightful well-researched and interesting works on the nature of education reform, past, present and future. Based, in part, from interviews with the most critical observers in the field (Giroux, Ravitch, Apple, among others), the authors have not only placed current debates about the achievement gap and effects of poverty in historical perspective, but have raised provocative questions about the very future of American education. Echoing Boyd Bode's astute obsevation that the 'problem of education is a problem of direction,' the authors offer readers some guideposts. -- Jeffrey Glanz, Wagner College

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 The End of School Reform Chapter 2 Three Major Movements—And No More Chapter 3 The Death of Progressive Education Chapter 4 The Limits of Educating the Poor Chapter 5 The Trouble with National Standards Chapter 6 The End of Public Schools? Chapter 7 A New Direction

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