1st Edition

Enduring Schools Problems And Possibilities

By Rita S Brause Copyright 1992
    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 2004. Enduring Schools: Problems and Possibilities provides a compelling argument for school reform of greater magnitude than the classroom itself. Based on twenty years of research and personal experiences, this macro-ethnography identifies the many influences on school practices which endure, despite their detrimental effects on students - and ultimately on society-at-large. In our highly bureaucratized schools, there is little time for significant learning or thinking. Visionary teachers become discouraged and leave. Students are mainly humiliated or ignored. Only a few are intellectually challenged or respected. Alienation, boredom, control and dependency are the real basics in most educational settings. Learning, which is implicitly at the heart of schooling, is explicitly discussed as a highly complex phenomenon. This perspective highlights how the enduring emphasis on control, dependency and expedience denies students the challenging experiences essential to nurture their critical thinking. But there are alternatives, some of which are explicitly described. Enduring Schools considers the perspectives of parents, students, teachers, administrators, architects, school board members, and school district officers. This provocative report from an insider demands our immediate attention.

    List of Tables and Figures, Acknowledgments, Permissions, Prologue Learning—Process, Settings and Outcomes, Chapter 1. Introducing the Learning Community, Chapter 2. Students, Chapter 3. Managing to Survive in Classrooms, Chapter 4. Teachers, Chapter 5. School Staffs, Chapter 6. Communities for Learning, Chapter 7. School and Real Life, Chapter 8. Schools for Tomorrow/Tomorrow’s Schools, Appendix A. Suggested Readings, Appendix B. Rights and Responsibilities of Students and Teachers, Appendix C Coalition of Essential Schools, References, Index

    Biography

    Rita S. Brause is Professor of Education in the Graduate School of Education of Fordham University where she has recently been appointed Director of Teacher Education for New Teachers. She teaches courses studying theories of language and learning as these influence educational practices. Enduring Schools draws on more than twenty years of her experiences as a teacher, teacher-educator, researcher, and consultant at all levels of schooling.