Chapter One The Failure of Corporate School Reform; Chapter Two The Failure of Evidence in Corporate School Policy Implementation; Chapter Three White Collar, Red Tape; Chapter Four Why Democratic Pedagogy Is Crucial for Confronting Corporate School Reform and How Liberals Are Making Things Worse; Chapter Five Toward a New Common School Movement;
Kenneth J. Saltman is Associate Professor of Educational Policy Studies and Research at DePaul University in Chicago. He is author most recently of The Edison Schools: Corporate Schooling and the Assault on Public Education (Routledge 2005).
"This is a must read for anyone desiring an understanding of the
myths, realities, and impact of and solution to two decades of
corporate school reform. Highly recommended."
—CHOICE
“Kudos to Kenneth Saltman, who offers yet another compelling look
at the devastating impact of corporate reform on public education.
His cogent analysis begs the question of why we as a nation are
turning education over to business when the latter is sowing the
seeds of its own undoing by caving into its own destructive logic
of short-term profit that compromises long-term value. To counter
this recklessness, he calls for a re-centering of public education
for reimagining both a political system that cannot be purchased by
corporate interests, policies, and agendas and an economy that is
more just, equal and democratic.”
—Angela Valenzuela, University of Texas at Austin and author of
Subtractive Schooling: U.S. Mexican Youth and the Politics of
Caring
“We live in a time when corporations have largely taken over the
governance of our country and, consequently, we face the most
organized and dangerous attack on public schooling in our nation’s
history. For those wanting to understand the goals and methods of
the corporate attack on public schooling, The Failure of Corporate
School Reform serves as an excellent resource that deconstructs the
rhetoric and methods of the corporate takeover.”
—David Hursh, University of Rochester and author of High-Stakes
Testing and the Decline of Teaching and Learning: The Real Crisis
in Education
“Saltman provides evidence and asks questions elite opinion makers
prefer to ignore. Though they are making a few people a lot of
money the ideologically driven corporate reforms of the past twenty
years are, in educational terms, a manifest failure. The proper
response according to Saltman is not to attempt to return to the
assumptions and structures of the past. The way forward that he
envisions requires the construction of a new system of common
schools that is rooted in the vision of a critical democratic
society. He has begun to outline a reform agenda for the new
century. Bravo professor.”
—Alex Molnar, director of the Education Policy Studies Laboratory
at Arizona State University and author of School Commercialism:
From Democratic Ideal to Market Commodity
“The Failure of Corporate School Reform could hardly be more
important a book at the current historical moment. Ken Saltman
shows us not only the pitfalls of such corporate reforms for civic
life and all aspects of schooling, he also offers us how we might
turn the call for democratic educational reform into a reality.
This is the best and most important book yet written on the swindle
of corporate educational reform and should be read by everyone
concerned about both public schooling, critical pedagogy, and the
nature of democracy itself.”
—Henry A. Giroux, McMaster University and author of Youth in
Revolt: Reclaiming a Democratic Future
"The Failure of Corporate School Reform brings one up to date on
what has been happening in five clear and easily read chapters, the
last offering a different path—neither the status quo nor the
corporate reform path, but instead what it would take to bring
up-to-date an old idea—the common school."
—From Deborah Meier on Education, deborahmeier.com
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