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Permissible Advantage? - The Moral Consequences of Elite Schooling (Paperback)
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Permissible Advantage? - The Moral Consequences of Elite Schooling (Paperback)
Series: Sociocultural, Political, and Historical Studies in Education
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This study of Edgewood Academy--a private, elite college
preparatory high school--examines what moral choices look like when
they are made by the participants in an exceptionally wealthy
school, and what the very existence of a privileged school
indicates about American society. It extends Peshkin's ongoing
exploration of U.S. high schools and their communities, each
focused in a different sociocultural setting. In this particular
inquiry, he began with two central questions:
* What is a school like whose students enter with a determined
disposition to attend college, and all of whom are selected on the
promise they display for college success?
* What can be learned from studying Edgewood Academy that
transcends the particular case of this school?
The volume opens with a description of how moral choices look when
they are made by the participants in an exceedingly wealthy school.
There is a general picture of the Academy, a discussion of the
processes the school uses to insure the quality of its students and
educators, and an overview of teachers and students that reveals
what is commendable about each group. These chapters clarify what a
school of ample financial means and wise leadership can do. Peshkin
goes on to reflect briefly on privilege and concludes with a
discussion of what the very existence of a privileged school
indicates about American society. Schools, he suggests, are about
much more than what goes on inside them--they mirror what is and is
not at stake for their particular constituents--and function
similarly for the nation.
Edgewood Academy's host community is not a village, town, church,
or tribe, as in Peshkin's previous studies. It is a community
created by shared aspirations for high-level academic attainment
and its associated benefits. Affluence and towering academic
achievement are the two most relevant factors. In this book,
advantage occupies center stage. The school's excellence is
documented not to extol its success, but, rather, to call attention
to what is available for its students that is not available for
most American children. The focus, ultimately, is on educational
justice as illuminated by the advantage of Academy students--that
is, on justice denied, not because anyone or any group or agency
consciously, planfully sets out to do injustice to other children,
but because injustice happens as the artifact of imagined
limitations of resources and means. Peshkin's purpose is not to
detail the particulars of how educational justice is denied to the
many, but to portray and examine the meaning of a privileged school
where educational justice prevails for the few.
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