Choosing Excellence in Public Schools: Where There's a Will, There's a Way
By (Author) David W. Hornbeck
By (author) Katherine Conner
Foreword by Richard W. Riley
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Education
15th June 2009
United States
General
Non Fiction
379.26
Paperback
300
Width 154mm, Height 223mm, Spine 26mm
544g
Choosing Excellence in Public Schools explains the origins of the low expectations we have of children, including, notably, children of color, those for whom English is a second language, poor children and children with disabilities. The book dispels the basis for low expectations. It makes clear the economic, demographic, civic, personal and moral imperative to educate all children to high standards and the consequences of not doing so. Hornbeck and Conner set forth a comprehensive, radical agenda based on proven practices and practical experience that will result in education success for virtually all children where faithfully implemented. This book breaks new ground. It establishes that the missing ingredient in school reform is the absence of values-driven, focused, well-financed, professionally staffed, technologically sophisticated grassroots expression of the public will insisting that the political, media, business, judicial and organized labor institutions that make the choices that result in our children's learning conditions make different, and effective choices. We get the education for our own children and grandchildren and those of others that we tolerate or demand.
I've read dozens of books on why we ought to make all of our schools successful and how to do it. No one tells us more compellingly than David Hornbeck. He and Katherine Conner have done unique work describing the public will that must create powerful support for successful schools and how to sustain that will in a way to move mountains, elect governors, and mobilize a people. If we are to realize our dreams for public schools and America's children, if Barack Obama's crusade for change is to succeed, this book must be our roadmap and our inspiration. -- Jim Hunt, founder, National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and former governor of North Carolina
David Hornbeck brings into clear focus the need to promote equity and excellence for all children, and he challenges educators, community leaders, and policy makers to make the hard decisionsthe right decisionson behalf of our nation's youth. His challenge, succinctly stated is, we know what to donow let's get it done! -- Gerald N. Tirozzi, executive director, National Association of Secondary School Principals
Hornbeck provides a comprehensive framework for urban school reform that is steeped in research, experience, and a set of shared values undergirded by the belief that all children have the wherewithal to achieve high standards given the appropriate supports. This book should be a touchstone for policymakers and practitioners who want to move beyond failure brought by dichotomous choices and silver bullets. -- Warren Simmons, executive director, Annenberg Institute for School Reform, Brown University
I had the privilege of 'shadowing' David Hornbeck for six years while he was Philadelphia School superintendent for our PBS documentary, Toughest Job in America. Now this good man has written a book drawing upon his 40 years of working to improve educational opportunities for children in Kentucky, Maryland, Pennsylvania and the nation. Along the way he settles a few scores, but most of this book is devoted to lessons he has learned. His overarching message is that the work is far from finishedand neither is he! As Mr. Hornbeck concludes, "We know what to do and how to do it. The choices are ours. The consequences of our choices are the legacy we leave to our grandchildren." -- John Merrow, education correspondent for The News Hour with Jim Lehrer and president, Learning Matters Incorporated
Hornbeck and Conner drew from two very appropriate historical traditions for the title of their book Choosing Excellence in Public Education. Thomas Paine, our American revolutionary hero and the African-American gospel songs urged their fellow countrymen to overthrow the unjust conditions of colonization and slavery by shouting and singing "where there's a will, there is a way." The way for school reform is clearly and beautifully chronicled and the shameful lack of political will is disturbingly and tragically reflected in the Philadelphia story of school reform. Repeating this tale in every urban school district in the country mocks our nation's promise that all men are created equal. Our English and African ancestors urge us to make a move for freedom through education. -- Wendy Puriefoy, president, Public Education Network
David Hornbeck speaks 'truth to power' in this hard hitting urban school reform manifesto shaped through his experience as Philadelphia's outspoken superintendent of schools. He provides an unflinching portrait of the realities and challenges we face if we, as a nation, are to make good on the promise of an education system that is equitable and excellent for all.
Who better than David Hornbeck, leading national reform architect, former Philadelphia superintendent and Maryland chief state school officer, activist, lawyer and minister, to deliver an unflinching portrait of the realities and challenges of contemporary, urban school reform His insights and guidance constitute a handbook for policy makers and school leaders committed to the continuing quest for equity and excellence.
David Hornbeck reminds us that an abiding, unshakeable belief that all kids can learn is an essential prerequisite for a successful educational strategy. This compelling/must-read work details an experience-based roadmap on how to convert this aspiration into a reality.
This book is about the power of advocacy, the setting of and meeting high standards, and of overcoming the obstacles to education reform.
David Hornbeck has earned national respect because he has transformed his lofty ideals into positive results through his work in Maryland, Kentucky and Philadelphia, sharing these experiences in this powerful book. Predictably, Hornbeck makes his core values very clear, grounding his work in the high expectation that all children can reach excellence in learning, and he holds adults inside educational institutions and in communities directly responsible and accountable.
Noble ideals are not enough; we must be thoughtful, strategic and comprehensive, and this is where the book provides unique insight. In a refreshingly open and frank accounting, Hornbeck wrestles with the complex and difficult word of transforming dreams into reality. In true Hornbeck fashion, he leaves this reader with unanswered and troubling questions, bringing me to a point of greater reflection about our efforts to improve public education for all our children, causing me to appreciate the complexity of this work we are pursuing and what lies ahead.
David W. Hornbeck has spent 42 years as an educator, community organizer, and activist, serving as Maryland State Superintendent of Schools, Philadelphia Superintendent of Schools, and chair of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, the Carnegie Corporation's Commission on the Education of Early Adolescents, the Children's Defense Fund, the Council of Chief State School Officers, the National Chapter I Commission, and the Public Education Network.
Katherine Conner spent her career in the School District of Philadelphia, as a teacher, teacher coach, and administrator, finishing as Associate Superintendent for Standards, Assessment, and Social Services.