This provocative and accessible text is addressed to prospective
and practicing teachers who believe schools must be fundamentally
reformed to meet student needs in an information age. Drawing on
interviews with frontline educators, the authors integrate
descriptive accounts of learning and teaching in schools today with
emerging multicultural curricula, information technologies,
organizational structures that support innovations, and democratic
dialogue. Jones and Maloy offer analytic perspectives for
rethinking the social, historical, and philosophical foundations of
education along with strategies for teacher renewal and
organizational change.
Adopting a constructivist-developmental approach to learning,
the authors identify endemic dilemmas that increasingly handicap
industrial-era schools. A stagnant economy heightens tensions due
to class, race, and gender inequities. Hierarchically structured
corporations and representative politics perpetuate business
domination. Computers offer possibilities for more open
communication, flexible organizations, and democratic discourse.
Alternative visions of the future that engage students can renew
cooperation, collaboration, and community in schools and
society.
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