Cantitate/Preț
Produs

New Hope for Urban High Schools: Cultural Reform, Moral Leadership, and Community Partnership

Autor Lisa Gonsalves, John Leonard
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mar 2007 – vârsta până la 17 ani
The last sixty years have seen tremendous strides in high school education. More young people of all races and backgrounds are graduating from high school, with more credits in tougher courses, than ever before. However, our dropout rate is still too high and far too many graduates are not prepared for college. High school reform for city schools has been particularly challenging where poverty and racism have undermined the high school experience. Educators have relied upon two reform strategies: the curricular strategy focuses on the academic content that is delivered in the classroom, content reformers have adjusted. They also have restructured the high school itself to maximize the impact of the classroom. This book offers an additional strategy, one essential for real change: the cultural reform strategy. Cultural change-a fundamental change in the beliefs, attitudes and expectations of the stakeholders-is difficult to achieve. Yet, without a change in the culture of the high school, curricular and structural reforms will have limited impact on raising student engagement.The authors illustrate the history of high school reform, and develop a case for the necessity of cultural reform, by taking an intimate look at one very typical urban high school-Dorchester High School in Boston. Dorchester High faced trends, policies, and challenges similar to those of high schools all over the country, so that the lessons learned there should be instructive for urban high schools across America. Gonsalves and Leonard also examine Dorchester High in the context of community partnerships and relationships.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 43617 lei

Preț vechi: 60467 lei
-28% Nou

Puncte Express: 654

Preț estimativ în valută:
8347 8781$ 6911£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 14-28 ianuarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780275991654
ISBN-10: 0275991652
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

Lisa Gonsalves is Assistant Professor at the Graduate College of Education, University of Massachusetts, Boston. She also serves as Faculty Coordinator of the Teach Next Year Professional Development School Teacher Preparation Program at Dorchester High School.John Leonard is Headmaster, Economics and Business Academy, Dorchester Education Complex, Boston Public Schools.

Cuprins

ForewordixPreface and AcknowledgmentsxiList of AbbreviationsxviiChapter 1. Introduction: Reforming our Most Troubled Urban High Schools1The History of Dorchester High School 1945 to 20067Chapter 2. Demographics, Discrimination, and Decline:The Destruction of Dorchester High 1945 to 19709Chapter 3. The Fragmentation of Culture and Community: The Long, Slow Decline of Dorchester High School 1969 to 198223Chapter 4. Help Is on the Way: The Community Comes to Dorchester High School 1982 to 198937Chapter 5. Reports from the Circus: The Community Goes After the School Committee 1982 to 199151Chapter 6. Back to Square One at Dorchester High School 1989 to 199559Chapter 7. The Community Returns to Dorchester High School 1996 to 199975Chapter 8. Bruises and Betrayals: The Last Years of Dorchester High School 1999 to 200385Chapter 9. Learning how to Educate Together: The Hope and Promise of Small High Schools 2003 to 2006109Lessons Learned for Urban Education135Introduction137Chapter 10. A Conceptual Framework for Enacting Cultural Reform in Struggling Urban High Schools: Re-engaging the Community139Chapter 11. School Culture and School Partnerships157Chapter 12. Consider the Challenges of Urban Adolescents183Chapter 13. The Ecological Systems Model and the Development of the School Leader199Chapter 14. School Values and Moral Authority209Notes223Bibliography231Index237

Recenzii

This book is the story of Dorchester High School in Boston. The groundwork for this case study is represented in great detail with a general history of schooling from 1945 to 2006, along with a thorough description of the impact of government mandates and their effects on schools like Dorchester High School, beginning in the late 1980s. There is little doubt that education since the 1960s has become more complex and unsettled. Such factors as a growing diversity in student population, students with special educational needs, and students with bilingual issues are all affecting our schools and testing educators, including those at Dorchester High. Authors Gonsalves and Leonard believe that the average urban high school is unable to fix itself. They state that the circle of responsibility extends far beyond the rolls of the school, and that a cultural reform strategy in this expanded community is a requirement for real school improvement. They intend to demonstrate how an alignment of forces, including businesses, legislative leaders, and involved educators, could significantly reform a school. They present numerous and varied stories that underscore the importance of how community partners facing unique challenges can work together to renew and reform our schools. Recommended. All levels.
Gonsalves and Leonard's new book offers a strategy for educators and school officials to use that moves beyond traditional solutions like curricular changes, more rigorous academic content in the classroom, or school restructuring designed to maximize the impact of the classroom. The authors assert that effective and lasting change must come from cultural change..By examining the trends, policies, and challenges of Dorchester High School in Boston, much like those of high schools all over the United States, the authors capture the lessons learned from Dorchester's history that should be instructive to educators and school officials today. They also examined Dorchester High in the context of community partnerships. This book will engage the reader. The authors do a good job of helping readers to connect the characters, time, and context of the Dorchester case with the needs and experiences of the readers' own students and communities.
Gonsalves and Leonard provide a case study of Dorchester High School in Boston (where both the authors have worked), which they consider in the context of national and local history from 1945 to 2006, as well as the geographical and sociological context of the local neighborhoods and community partnerships. They then present lessons learned and recommendations for urban high school reform work through their framework, which is based on the theories of Urie Bronfenbrenner and his ecological systems approach. The impact of community partners, challenges urban teenagers face, and the role of school leaders in cultural change are discussed.