Description
The Struggle for Control of Public
Education is a highly
charged, politically important
work, written with clarity
and courage, in defense of
public education as a legacy
endangered by the juggernaut
of corporate control."
Jonathan Kozol
"One hundred years ago, children were kept out of school to be used as a cheap
factory workforce; today, they are kept in school to become a cheap workforce
in the factories of the future."
Seduced by the language of
the market economy, those making
decisions about education today
argue that market strategies
promote democratic educational
reform, when really they promote
market reform of education. Michael
Engel argues against this tendency,
siding with democratic values-which
encourage openness, creativity,
social awareness and idealism,
whereas market values uphold
individual achievement, competition,
economic growth, and national
security.
Behind the façade of
progressive rhetoric, advocates
of these corporate models have
succeeded in imposing their definition
of school reform through federal
and state policy makers. As a
result, communities lose control
of their schools, teachers lose
control of their work, and students
lose control of their futures.
Engel attacks the increasing
dominance of market ideology
in educational policy and extends
his critique beyond such trends
in school reform as vouchers,
charter schools, and "contracting
out" to include issues such as
decentralization, computer technology,
and standards.
The debate over privatization
amounts to ideological warfare
between democratic and market
values. The question is not so
much about "school choice" as
it is about the values Americans
want at the root of their society.
Unprecedented in its value-based
challenge to the threat of market
ideology on educational policy, The
Struggle for Control of Public
Education is a sophisticated
call for a return to community-controlled
schools and democratic values.
This argument offers theoretical
and practical models crafted
in the contemporary feminist
and social reconstructionist
tradition. Readers interested
in the study of educational policies,
philosophy, and policy will find
this book engaging. |