Community Organizing for Urban School Reform

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University of Texas Press, 1997 - 338 pagine

Observers of all political persuasions agree that our urban schools are in a state of crisis. Yet most efforts at school reform treat schools as isolated institutions, disconnected from the communities in which they are embedded and insulated from the political realities which surround them.

Community Organizing for Urban School Reform tells the story of a radically different approach to educational change. Using a case study approach, Dennis Shirley describes how working-class parents, public school teachers, clergy, social workers, business partners, and a host of other engaged citizens have worked to improve education in inner-city schools. Their combined efforts are linked through the community organizations of the Industrial Areas Foundation, which have developed a network of over seventy "Alliance Schools" in poor and working-class neighborhoods throughout Texas. This deeply democratic struggle for school reform contains important lessons for all of the nation's urban areas. It provides a striking point of contrast to orthodox models of change and places the political empowerment of low-income parents at the heart of genuine school improvement and civic renewal.

 

Sommario

The Contemporary Context
13
Moving Schools into the Power Arena
32
Morningside Middle School Starting a Path for Change
97
Jefferson Davis High School The Struggle for Reform
117
Ysleta Elementary School From Parental Engagement to a New School
135
Zavala Elementary School Learning the Tools of Democracy
147
San Antonio Building Networks of Reform throughout the City
167
Texas Alliance Schools throughout the State
200
Resistance to Change
223
The Pursuit of Success
241
A Great Truth Wants to Be Criticized
265
Building Laboratories of Democracy
283
Notes
297
Bibliography
321
Index
329
Copyright

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Pagina 2 - In many cities, what is termed "restructuring" struck me as very little more than moving around the same old furniture within the house of poverty. The perceived objective was a more "efficient" ghetto school or one with greater "input" from the ghetto parents or more "choices

Informazioni sull'autore (1997)

Dennis Shirley is Associate Dean and Professor of Teacher Education at the Lynch School of Education at Boston College.

Informazioni bibliografiche