Available Formats
Reclaiming Our Children, Reclaiming Our Schools: Reversing Privatization and Recovering Democracy in America's Public Schools
By (Author) Eric Shyman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
16th December 2016
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational strategies and policy
Philosophy and theory of education
Teaching staff / Educators
371.010973
Paperback
154
Width 151mm, Height 231mm, Spine 12mm
236g
Reclaiming Our Children, Reclaiming our Schools offers both a comprehensive censure of the current corporate interest in privatizing public schooling as well as a framework for attaining meaningful education reform based in democracy and the combined will of the public. Using current research and sound philosophical and ethical arguments, Shyman argues for more attention to be paid to teacher expertise, participatory democratic practices, genuine valuation of ethnic and cultural diversity, attention to global citizenship and cooperation, and the prevention of private profit-based interests in public schooling policy and practice. By returning the power of the public school to the public and the true experts, public schools can become the most important tool in securing genuine cultural growth leading to a stronger, safer and more cooperative nation and world.
In this concise and riveting analysis of public schooling, Eric Shyman powerfully makes the case for true education reform. With the level of honesty and clarity of thought desperately needed to address the crisis of American education, Shyman takes the reader through a series of stimulating arguments as he lays out a plan for socially just educational reform. In so doing, he shows us how we might reclaim not only our children, but our democracy. Shyman's handbook for the transformation of education is essential reading for anyone who cares about our children and the schools who shape them. -- Robin DiAngelo, author of Is Everyone Really Equal
Timely and provocative, this book traces the private takeover of American public schools, a movement that has sacrificed the democratizing potential of public education and exacerbated the academic and social wellbeing of children from marginalized groups. Going beyond critique, Eric Shyman offers an inspiring and comprehensive plan of action that calls for reclaiming public schools by decentralizing control of education, elevating the role of teachers in educational decision-making, promoting culturally and linguistically responsive teaching, and adopting a curriculum that nurtures global citizenship. Reclaiming our children, Reclaiming our Schools is a must-read for parents, teachers, school administrators, teacher educators, and others committed to making schools democratic and just. -- Ana Mara Villegas, Director of the Teacher Education and Teacher Development PhD Program, Montclair State University
In unearthing the current myths about educational reform,Reclaiming Our Children, Reclaiming our Schoolsoffers a realistic alternative vision for change based on an accurate and insightful analysis of the ways that racial and economic oppression shape the situation of urban schools.Further, it lucidly and passionately reimagines the transformation of schools through actually lived lives of Black and Brown students and the ideas and desires of those who truly care about them. -- Ricky Lee Allen, Associate Professor of Educational Thought & Sociocultural Studies, University of New Mexico
In Reclaiming our Children, Reclaiming our Schools Eric Shyman offers a sweeping, critical analysis of the privatization of public education in the United States while providing concrete examples of more democratic, equitable solutions from around the world. Concise and sharply written, Reclaiming our Children is a perfect book for anyone who wants to both understand the regressive politics of neoliberal, corporate education reform and envision something better. -- Wayne Au, Associate Professor, University of Washington Bothell; editor, Rethinking Schools
Eric Shyman is an assistant professor of Child Study at St. Josephs College on Long Island, New York. He received his doctorate at Teachers College, Columbia University.