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The first text to review local school policy in such vital areas as discipline, curriculum, personnel, scheduling, grouping, evaluation, homework, and programs for at risk students. Examples of local policy as a dimension of school effectiveness appear throughout the text.
Many Americans view today's problems in education as an unprecedented crisis brought on by contemporary social ills. In Learning from the Past a group of distinguished educational historians and scholars of public policy reminds us that many of our current difficulties – as well as recent reform efforts – have important historical antecedents. What can we learn, they ask, from nineteenth century efforts to promote early childhood education, or debates in the 1920s about universal secondary education, or the curriculum reforms of the 1950s? Reflecting a variety of intellectual and disciplinary orientations, the contributors to this volume examine major changes in educational development and reform and consider how such changes have been implemented in the past. They address questions of governance, equity and multiculturalism, curriculum standards, school choice, and a variety of other issues. Policy makers and other school reformers, they conclude, would do well to investigate the past in order to appreciate the implications of the present reform initiatives.
This book tells the stories of five private schools begun in the Northeastern US during the 1960s by idealistic believers in educational freedom. Two of the schools have closed; the other three are still open and flourishing. Although the schools are different, they share a belief in the individuality of each child and his/her unlimited potential. Their stories are still relevant today.