0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments

The Fractured Schoolhouse - Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society (Hardcover): Neal P. McCluskey The Fractured Schoolhouse - Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society (Hardcover)
Neal P. McCluskey
R2,158 Discovery Miles 21 580 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

American public schooling was established to unify diverse people and prepare citizens for democracy. Intuitively, it would teach diverse people the same values, preferably in the same buildings, with the goal that they will learn to get along and uphold government by the people. But intuition can be wrong; significant evidence suggests that public schools have not brought diverse people together, whether from legally mandated racial segregation, espousing values many people could not accept, or human beings simply tending to associate with others like themselves. Indeed, the basic reality that people have diverse values and desires has rendered public schooling not a unifying force, but a battleground. That public schooling is necessary for democracy is also not supported, both because we do not have a commonly agreed upon definition of "democracy," and because public schooling violates the bedrock American value-liberty-that democracy is supposed to protect. The Fractured Schoolhouse: Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society proposes that to fulfill the mission of public schooling, we need what some might call its opposite: school choice. Education grounded in liberty would enable diverse people to pursue curricula and policies they think are right without having to impose them on others, and by making separated groups equals and easing the creation of new identities, it would foster bridge-building.

The Fractured Schoolhouse - Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society (Paperback): Neal P. McCluskey The Fractured Schoolhouse - Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society (Paperback)
Neal P. McCluskey
R1,023 Discovery Miles 10 230 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

American public schooling was established to unify diverse people and prepare citizens for democracy. Intuitively, it would teach diverse people the same values, preferably in the same buildings, with the goal that they will learn to get along and uphold government by the people. But intuition can be wrong; significant evidence suggests that public schools have not brought diverse people together, whether from legally mandated racial segregation, espousing values many people could not accept, or human beings simply tending to associate with others like themselves. Indeed, the basic reality that people have diverse values and desires has rendered public schooling not a unifying force, but a battleground. That public schooling is necessary for democracy is also not supported, both because we do not have a commonly agreed upon definition of "democracy," and because public schooling violates the bedrock American value-liberty-that democracy is supposed to protect. The Fractured Schoolhouse: Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society proposes that to fulfill the mission of public schooling, we need what some might call its opposite: school choice. Education grounded in liberty would enable diverse people to pursue curricula and policies they think are right without having to impose them on others, and by making separated groups equals and easing the creation of new identities, it would foster bridge-building.

Feds in the Classroom - How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American Education (Paperback): Neal P. McCluskey Feds in the Classroom - How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American Education (Paperback)
Neal P. McCluskey
R887 Discovery Miles 8 870 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Thomas Jefferson warned that 'the natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground.' American elementary and secondary education shows how right he was. Two centuries ago the founders rejected federal participation in education and even rejected George Washington's plans on establishing a national university. It should be of little surprise, then, that the term 'education' appears nowhere in the Constitution. Few early Americans would have considered providing education a proper function of local or state governments, much less some distant federal government. Federal control of the nation's schools would have simply been unthinkable. This view was the prevailing one well into the 20th century. In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan campaigned, in part, on a proposal to close the federal department of education. How things have changed in a few short decades. Today, every state requires children to attend school, and most dictate precisely what the children will learn. Parents, in contrast, are able to make very few choices about their children's education. And what role does the federal government have now? It has drilled deep into almost every public classroom in America. Washington can now tell public schools whether their teachers are qualified, their reading instruction acceptable, and what they must do when their students do not achieve on par with federal demands. At the outset of his presidential administration, for example, George W. Bush pushed for the largest federal encroachment in education in American history. Through his No Child Left Behind Act, the federal government can dictate what will be taught, when, and by whom, to most of the 15,000 public school districts and 47 million public school children. Why the change? Is it a change? What's the cost to the taxpayers? What are the benefits to public school students? To public schools? Today, with the almost-complete consolidation of education authority in the hands of policy makers in Washington, the last of our educational liberty has been pushed to the brink of extinction. Thankfully, there is still hope: Over just the last decade-and-a-half, school choice - public education driven by parents, not politicians and bureaucrats - has become a force to be reckoned with. Feds in the Classroom will challenge much of the conventional wisdom surrounding federal involvement in education. The author considers all federal activities-legislation, funding, regulations, and judicial oversight-and then makes a cost-benefit and constitutional assessment.

Feds in the Classroom - How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American Education (Hardcover): Neal P. McCluskey Feds in the Classroom - How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American Education (Hardcover)
Neal P. McCluskey
R2,552 Discovery Miles 25 520 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Thomas Jefferson warned that "the natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." American elementary and secondary education shows how right he was. Two centuries ago the founders rejected federal participation in education and even rejected George Washington's plans on establishing a national university. It should be of little surprise, then, that the term "education" appears nowhere in the Constitution. Few early Americans would have considered providing education a proper function of local or state governments, much less some distant federal government. Federal control of the nation's schools would have simply been unthinkable. This view was the prevailing one well into the 20th century. In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan campaigned, in part, on a proposal to close the federal department of education. How things have changed in a few short decades. Today, every state requires children to attend school, and most dictate precisely what the children will learn. Parents, in contrast, are able to make very few choices about their children's education. And what role does the federal government have now? It has drilled deep into almost every public classroom in America. Washington can now tell public schools whether their teachers are qualified, their reading instruction acceptable, and what they must do when their students do not achieve on par with federal demands. At the outset of his presidential administration, for example, George W. Bush pushed for the largest federal encroachment in education in American history. Through his No Child Left Behind Act, the federal government can dictate what will be taught, when, and by whom, to most of the 15,000 public school districts and 47 million public school children. Why the change? Is it a change? What's the cost to the taxpayers? What are the benefits to public school students? To public schools? Today, with the almost-complete consolidation of education authority in the hands of policy makers in Washington, the last of our edu

Educational Freedom - Remembering Andrew Coulson - Debating His Ideas (Paperback): Neal P. McCluskey, Jason Bedrick Educational Freedom - Remembering Andrew Coulson - Debating His Ideas (Paperback)
Neal P. McCluskey, Jason Bedrick
R350 Discovery Miles 3 500 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Botanicum
Kathy Willis Hardcover R430 Discovery Miles 4 300
Essays on Natural History and Rural…
John Walker Paperback R768 Discovery Miles 7 680
Ont
Wessel Pretorius Paperback R191 Discovery Miles 1 910
Florula Bostoniensis - a Collection of…
Jacob Bigelow Paperback R614 Discovery Miles 6 140
Night Errant
Georges Feydeau Paperback R346 Discovery Miles 3 460
Mushrooms and Other Fungi of South…
Marieka Gryzenhout, Gary Goldman Paperback R430 R371 Discovery Miles 3 710
Our Country's Good - Based on the novel…
Timberlake Wertenbaker Paperback  (1)
R324 Discovery Miles 3 240
N.P. Van Wyk Louw - Versamelde Dramas
N. P. van Wyk Louw Hardcover R568 Discovery Miles 5 680
Journal of the Academy of Natural…
Academy of Natural Science Philadelphia Paperback R656 Discovery Miles 6 560
Field Guide to Wild Flowers of South…
John Manning Paperback R550 R429 Discovery Miles 4 290

 

Partners