The Fractured Schoolhouse : Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society

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The Fractured Schoolhouse : Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 234 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781475864250
  • DDC分類 371.010973

Full Description

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.

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Why Do We Have Government Schooling?
Chapter 2. Reality Begs to Differ: Little Unity, Wrenching Conflict
Chapter 3. Why Think Public Schools Would Unify?
Chapter 4. The "Democracy" Problem
Chapter 5. American Values
Chapter 6. Is Freedom the Key to Unity and Equality?
Chapter 7. For Peace and Cohesion, We Need Educational Liberty
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

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