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Reading, Writing, and Justice

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A book for teachers, parents, and other concerned citizens who care about public education, who want schools to be democratic in the best sense, and who seek argumentative ammunition for defending ...
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  • 24 July 1997
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A book for teachers, parents, and other concerned citizens who care about public education, who want schools to be democratic in the best sense, and who seek argumentative ammunition for defending schools and for placing school issues within the larger framework of the long struggle to keep and expand democracy in the United States

Fraser argues that advocates of the public schools must recapture and redefine democracy so that it becomes both the purpose of public education and the model on which schools are structured.

Defending an inclusive understanding of democracy, in which every citizen's contribution is essential to the health of the whole, Fraser responds to mean-spirited attacks on multicultural education, on school funding, and on progressive education itself. Finally, he explores the democratic and antidemocratic potential in increased use of computers in schools and in the reform of teacher education.

This is a book for teachers, parents, and other concerned citizens who care about public education, who want schools to be democratic in the best sense, and who seek ammunition for defending schools and for placing school issues in the larger context of the long struggle for a more just and humane society.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 280
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, INTERRUPTIONS: Border Testimony(ies) and Critical Discourse/s
Publication Date: 24 July 1997
ISBN: 9780791434062
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"This book frames a critical question often overlooked in the current debate — schools and school reform for what? The author provides a clearly written and well-argued critique of the economic rationale for school reform and offers a more democratic, radical, and humanistic vision of what schools are for." — Tony Wagner, Institute for Responsive Education, Boston University

Acknowledgments


Introduction

1. Education Reform and Economic Renewal: Or, It Will Take More Than Robert Reich to Make Schools Work

2. Defining Democracy, Defining Democratic Education

3. The School and the Quest for a Multicultural Democracy

4. Toward a New Kind of Child-Centered Curriculum: The Individual Child and a Democratic Society

5. Technology, Democracy, and School Policy

6. Preparing Teachers for Democratic Schools

Notes


Bibliography


Index