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What's Wrong with Our Schools: and How We Can Fix Them
 
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What's Wrong with Our Schools: and How We Can Fix Them [Hardcover]

Michael C. Zwaagstra , Rodney A. Clifton , John C. Long
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 75.95
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This is simply the best book on the public school I have seen. Written in straightforward language, parents are informed about the foolish fads that still afflict our public schools. Consistent with the research and without condescension the book advocates a return to common sense. (Mark Holmes )

A clear, fluent and (yes!) common-sense alternative to the culture of romantic progressivism which has captured so completely the education establishment throughout North America. The authors have read the research, but they draw also critically on classroom experience and make recommendations that are practical in the distinctly unideal reality of today's public school systems. (Peter Brimelow )

For parents puzzled by school rules and practices that don't make sense to them, What's Wrong With Our Schools is a useful corrective. It illumines the principal arguments now raging over education policy and explains how to get in-depth information that allows us bewildered parents and other onlookers to figure out who is right. (Jay Mathews )

If you read only one book on current affairs this year, make it this one. What goes on in our schools is at the core of all that happens in our country?what citizens know, what they believe, and how they behave. The authors have marshaled all of the issues at stake in the so-called school wars, explained them lucidly and sensibly, and made recommendations that affect every American parent, teacher, school administrator and taxpayer. They illustrate all sides of the arguments in the vast and often confusing literature on the various aspects of the education debates and they offer practical answers to some of the most vexing questions of the day, beyond spin and image, ideology and the cant. An illuminating, eminently readable guide to the ways in whichwe could make our schools the instruments they should be for educating men and women to live in a democracy.. (Rita Kramer )

The sanest, most commonsensical education-reform book I have seen in many years, What's Wrong with Our Schools is a trove of clear-thinking, hard-won front-line wisdom, rich experience, and policy sagacity. Our schools and children will be a lot better off if the authors' advice is widely heeded. (Finn, Chester E. Jr. )

The authors do an outstanding job of puncturing the balloon of progressive education, explaining in straightforward, clear, and compelling fashion why much of American K–12 education has failed over the past couple decades. Whole language, fuzzy math, constructivism, and the usual suspects are nicely critiqued. As What's Wrong With Our Schools indicates, the main culprit in all this is an abandonment of common sense by the gurus who dominate the profession. All in all, a great read, especially for parents wondering whether the emperor has any clothes or not (J. Martin Rochester )

If you read only one book on current affairs this year, make it this one. What goes on in our schools is at the core of all that happens in our country—what citizens know, what they believe, and how they behave. The authors have marshaled all of the issues at stake in the so-called school wars, explained them lucidly and sensibly, and made recommendations that affect every American parent, teacher, school administrator and taxpayer. They illustrate all sides of the arguments in the vast and often confusing literature on the various aspects of the education debates and they offer practical answers to some of the most vexing questions of the day, beyond spin and image, ideology and the cant. An illuminating, eminently readable guide to the ways in which we could make our schools the instruments they should be for educating men and women to live in a democracy. (Rita Kramer )

This fine and brave book more than delivers on its claim of common sense—an uncommon virtue in the world of school reform. It will empower parents and liberate teachers. I hope it will be widely read, for its message desperately needs to be heeded.

Product Description

What's Wrong with Our Schools and How We Can Fix Them examines the status of public education in North America and exposes many of the absurd instructional practices found in all-too-many schools. Written by three experienced educators, this book provides readers with a direct window into public education. The language is straightforward, the case studies based on real events, and the research evidence clearly presented. With chapter titles like, "Subject Matter Matters," "A Pass Should be Earned," and "There is Too Much Edu-Babble," the authors systematically demolish the ridiculous fads that have taken hold of public education. As unashamed apologists for the importance of knowledge and content in school curricula, the authors clearly show why the views of romantic progressives, like those of popular author Alfie Kohn, fail to stand up to rigorous scrutiny. A consistent focus on common sense permeates this book and provides parents, teachers, and administrators with practical ways in which they can help improve public education. Anyone interested in the future of public education will benefit from reading this book. For more information, visit www.fixingourschools.com.

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3 Reviews
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3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An essential guide to schooling, Nov 22 2010
First a caution. Although there is no financial involvement, I did provide advice during the writing of this book. However, I would not have done so had I not been very impressed by the initial version.

This is indeed a common sense guide to current elementary and secondary education in North America. It calmly - there is no hyperbole - addresses current issues and illustrates the right and wrong way to go, all consistent with the research where applicable - there are many major issues with which research cannot deal. The book is particularly valuable for parents, many of whom will agree with the authors' conclusions, but fear to raise them with educators. The book will also be useful for those teachers who are not enamored with Deweyan progressivism and the continual sequence of reforms whose main function is to lower educational standards.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Help for the Average Parent to Fight For Better Schools, Sep 9 2010
I was shocked to hear in the news what is going on in our schools and didn't want to believe it was happening in my daughters. But then I found out that they had a no fail policy and a no mark deduction policy for late/missing assignments. Then they wanted to remove percent grades from reports cards in favour of nebulous assessments. I went to the PTA meeting armed with this book and made it clear that I was going to fight for a good education for my daughter.

This book is full of good ideas and arguments against the dumbing down of our educational system and has clear, concise language that cuts through the edu-babble that confuses parents and makes no sense (it turns out it really doesn't make sense!). This is definately worth your while if you are concerned about your child's education and future.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Two Steps Back, Mar 7 2012
Although touted as heralds for the next wave of school policy reform, Michael Zwaagstra and his co-authors present a model for education that is remarkably traditional and conservative. This book appeals to popular opinion and common sense to the exclusion of solid research and academic study. Their focus on standards and academic rigor attest to the conservative swing of the education pendulum occuring right now. This book of opportunity takes the message of de-formative reform to the public.

My criticisms are many.

1. "Case Studies" are fake, misleading, and offensive. At the beginning of each chapter, the authors present a hypothetical situation to illustrate their point. Here, they lean the ridiculous suggestions and blatant hyperbole to sway the emotions, rather than the minds, of their readers. They frequently paint teachers, administrators, and policy-makers as incompetent and lazy, implying that teachers are not motivated by the best-interests of their students. When the situation doesn't pack enough punch, the authors rely on cheap tactics to make their reader side with them. For example, when talking about Student-Led Conferences, the authors make sure that we are aware that the mother is uncomfortable in the small chair because her skirt is too short, subtlely implying that the conference is the cause of the mother's loss of innocence (and unnecessarily invoking the sexual modesty of their largely conservative readers). In the same story, the authors make sure that we know that the teacher was a bit late. If the argument is valid, you should not rely on such low-grade tricks to convince your audience.

2. The policies presented are ridiculous. With chapter titles like "Direct instruction is good teaching" and "classrooms should be teacher-centred" it's a wonder that the authors have ever even inhabited a faculty of education. There are reams and reams of research that deny the efficacy of their type of classroom, but the authors tend to ignore research that does not fit their ends.

3. Poorly researched and quotes taken out of context. I'm sure many of the researchers and theorists quoted in the book would be offended by the spirit in which their words are presented. Quotations are so cut-up and plastered around the page, there is no way that the original thought was anywhere close to what is presented in the book. At one point, the authors quote page numbers from the same article in reverse order (first page 10, then 9...) in the same paragraph!

4. The writing in unimaginative, childish, and condescending. I could tell as soon as I started thumbing through the book that I was really looking at a series of undergraduate papers. The parallel organization of each chapter (with sub-headings, in case I couldn't understand!) was boring and took any thrill out of reading. You don't need to tell me that a passage is an introduction. I know that based on the fact that it is introducing the chapter. Also, if you like rhetorical questions, you'll be in for a treat. They use them extensively. A rhetorical device is only effective for the first 20 iterations. After that, it gets irritating.

5. The appeal to common-sense. A clever (and "grass-roots") way of avoiding key academic questions. They hide behind "common-sense" to avoid clarifying their opinions or presenting legitimate supporting research. In fact, the majority of these appeals rely on the fact that the readers will apply their own conceptions of public education (based on their personal experience) onto the modern system. I constantly hear the phrase "In my day..." as I read. This is also how they manipulate their readers into believing them. If it's common-sense then only idiots wouldn't believe us, right?

Overall I found this book a superb waste of time for the serious educator. As an exercise in contrarian rhetoric, it served its purpose in re-affirming my own beliefs about school, but to actually consider the recommendations presented in this book would be misguided and harmful. If you want to go back to schools as they were, ignoring the research and throwing out everything we know about good teaching, you can take this book's message to heart. Otherwise, you're better off reading something with a bit more substance and conducted by reputable scholars.

After reading it, I couldn't live with myself knowing that it had 5 stars on Amazon.
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