Educating the "right" Way: Markets, Standards, God, and InequalityPsychology Press, 2001 - 306 من الصفحات As American schools undergo a dramatic shift to the right, Michael W. Apple, internationally acclaimed author and educator, uncovers the roots of this conservative swing and points the way to a more balanced approach. Why have the needs of private business become top priorities in the public classroom? How did school vouchers move from the conservative fringe to the political mainstream? Why are scores on standardized tests falling, even as teachers are forced to cram more "facts" into their curricula? Apple argues that the interests of some strange bedfellows -- neo-liberals, neo-conservatives, authoritarian populists, and the professional middle class -- have converged to threaten the egalitarian ideals on which American public education was built. He dissects how this coalition has pushed educational policies toward a combination of weak state practices (markets, school choice) and strong state practices (state-mandated curricula and testing). A former classroom teacher himself, Apple offers concrete, common sense solutions that show what critical educators and parents can do to interrupt these trends and develop a more democratic educational system, suited to the needs of all American children. Michael W. Apple is the Bascom Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Educational Policy Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He has recently been awarded both a Lifetime Achievement Award by the American Educational Research Association and a UCLA Medal for outstanding academic achievement in education. * Apple is a world-renowned figure in educational and social policy. He is the editor of Routledge's very successful series Critical Social Thought *Apple's book Ideology and Curriculumwas internationally voted as one of the top twenty books on education in the 20th century -- his books are published in fifteen languages * Not merely a critique of the right, but of the left as well -- addresses current, critical problems in our schools |
المحتوى
Markets Standards God and Inequality | 1 |
Josephs Story | 3 |
Conservative Agendas | 7 |
Mapping the Right | 9 |
Contested Freedom | 12 |
Marketizing the World | 17 |
Restoring Cultural Order | 20 |
Church and State | 22 |
Southern Cross | 122 |
God Morality and Markets | 129 |
Politics and the Clergy | 134 |
The Electronic Clergy | 135 |
A Christian Nation and Free Speech | 138 |
Godless Schools | 142 |
Were Are Not Doing Anything Different | 147 |
The Structure of Feeling of Authoritarian Populism | 151 |
Economics and Religion | 24 |
Managerialism | 28 |
Analyzing Conservative Modernization | 31 |
Whose Markets Whose Knowledge? | 35 |
Schooling Choice and Democracy | 38 |
Teaching Real Knowledge | 47 |
Schooling As God Wanted It | 53 |
More Testing More Often | 57 |
Conclusion | 59 |
Producing Inequalities Conservative Modernization | 63 |
Right Turn | 64 |
New Markets Old Traditions | 66 |
Markets and Performance | 69 |
National Standards National Curriculum and National Testing | 83 |
Creating Educational Triage | 90 |
Thinking Strategically | 94 |
Endangered Christianity | 101 |
Secular Dangers | 112 |
From Insiders to Outsiders | 116 |
How Can Hate Seem So Nice? | 161 |
Turning Straw into Gold | 165 |
Away with All Teachers The Cultural Politics of Home Schooling | 171 |
Satans Threat and the Fortress Home | 173 |
Attacking the State | 178 |
Public and Private | 185 |
Conclusion | 189 |
Righting Wrongs and Interrupting the Right | 193 |
Contradictory Reforms | 197 |
Racing Toward Educational Reform | 202 |
Making Challenges Public | 212 |
Learning from Other Nations | 218 |
Thinking Heretically | 220 |
Making Critical Education Practices Practical | 227 |
Hope As a Resource | 229 |
Endnotes | 231 |
273 | |
291 | |
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