Search results for ""author jonathan kozol""
The New Press An End to Inequality
An eloquent and passionate call for educational reparations, from the New York Times bestselling author When Jonathan Kozol’s Death at an Early Age appeared in 1967, it rocked the education world. Based on the Rhodes Scholar’s first year of teaching in Boston’s Black community, the book described the abuse and neglect of children for no reason but the color of their skin. Since that National Book Award-winning volume, Kozol has spent more than fifty years visiting with children and working with their teachers in other deeply troubled and unequal public schools.Now, in the culminating work of his career, Kozol goes back into the urban schools, where racial isolation is at the highest level since he became a teacher and is now compounded by a new regime of punitive instruction and coercive uniformity that is deemed to be appropriate for children who are said to be incapable of learning in more democratic ways
£18.99
Random House USA Inc The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America
£15.52
Crown Publishing Group (NY) The Theft of Memory: Losing My Father, One Day at a Time
£13.91
Crown Publishing Group (NY) Ordinary Resurrections: Children in the Years of Hope
£14.29
Oneworld Publications On Being a Teacher
Jonathan Kozol, National Book Award-winning author and one of America’s foremost writers on social issues, offers a passionate and provocative critique on the role of the teacher in America’s public school system. Writing as a teacher, Kozol advocates an approach to education that is infused with ethical values: fairness, truth, and integrity, and a driving compassion for the world beyond the classroom. Kozol not only sheds light on what it means to be a teacher, but gives constructive suggestions on how teachers can work conscientiously within the system to foster these values in concert with parents, students and fellow teachers.
£9.99
Crown Publishing Group (NY) Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools
£15.62