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The landmark New York Times bestseller that demonstrates the
benefits of race-conscious admissions in higher education First
published in 1998, William Bowen and Derek Bok's The Shape of the
River became an immediate landmark in the debate over affirmative
action in America. It grounded a contentious subject in concrete
data at a time when arguments surrounding it were characterized
more by emotion than evidence-and it made a forceful case that
race-conscious admissions were successfully helping to promote
equal opportunity. Today, the issue of affirmative action remains
unsettled. Much has changed, but The Shape of the River continues
to present the most compelling data available about the effects of
affirmative action. Now with a new foreword by Nicholas Lemann and
an afterword by Derek Bok, The Shape of the River is an essential
text for anyone seeking to understand race-conscious admissions in
higher education.
History-natural history, human history, and personal history-and
place are the cornerstones of The Eye of the Mammoth. Stephen
Harrigan's career has taken him from the Alaska Highway to the
Chihuahuan Desert, from the casinos of Monaco to his ancestors'
village in the Czech Republic. And now, in this new edition, he
movingly recounts in "Off Course" a quest to learn all he can about
his father, who died in a plane crash six months before he was
born. Harrigan's deceptively straightforward voice belies an
intense curiosity about things that, by his own admission, may be
"unknowable." Certainly, we are limited in what we can know about
the inner life of George Washington, the last days of Davy
Crockett, the motives of a caged tiger, or a father we never met,
but Harrigan's gift-a gift that has also made him an award-winning
novelist-is to bring readers closer to such things, to make them
less remote, just as a cave painting in the title essay eerily
transmits the living stare of a long-extinct mammoth.
What do we know about the history, origin, design, and purpose of the SAT? Who invented it, and why? How did it acquire such a prominent and lasting position in American education? The Big Test reveals the ideas, people, and politics behind a fifty-year-old utopian social experiment that changed this country. Combining vibrant storytelling, vivid portraiture, and thematic analysis, Lemann shows why this experiment did not turn out as planned. It did create a new elite, but it also generated conflict and tension—and America's best educated, most privileged people are now leaders without followers.
Drawing on unprecedented access to the Educational Testing Service’s archives, Lemann maintains that America’s meritocracy is neither natural nor inevitable, and that it does not apportion opportunity equally or fairly. His important study not only asks profound moral and political questions about the past and future of our society but also carries implications for current social and educational policy. As Brent Staples noted in his New York Times editorial column: “Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts announced that prospective students would no longer be required to submit SAT scores with their applications. . . . Holyoke's president, Joanne Creighton, was personally convinced by reading Nicholas Lemann's book, The Big Test, which documents how the SAT became a tool for class segregation.”
All students of education, sociology, and recent U.S. history—especially those focused on testing, theories of learning, social stratification, or policymaking—will find this book fascinating and alarming.
"An arresting piece of popular history." --Sean Wilentz, "The New
York Times Book Review" Nicholas Lemann opens this extraordinary
book with a riveting account of the horrific events of Easter 1873
in Colfax, Louisiana, where a white militia of Confederate
veterans-turned-vigilantes attacked the black community there and
massacred hundreds of people in a gruesome killing spree. This
began an insurgency that changed the course of American history:
for the next few years white Southern Democrats waged a campaign of
political terrorism aiming to overturn the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments and challenge President Grant's support for the emergent
structures of black political power. "Redemption" is the first book
to describe in uncompromising detail this organized racial
violence, which reached its apogee in Mississippi in 1875.
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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