Urban School Reform: Lessons from San Diego
Frederick M. Hessen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iun 2005
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This book addresses the full range of critical issues pertaining to urban school reform by looking at recent reform efforts in San Diego. In essays by an impressive gathering of scholars and practitioners from across the country, the book considers crucial dimensions of San Diego s reform agenda, including performance, governance, the external environment, central leadership and management, district infrastructure, support services, and school-level instructional efforts. The result is a full-scale assessment of San Diego s reform efforts a record of unmistakable relevance and value to other urban school reform movements throughout the United States.
Impatient with the slow and sometimes stagnant pace of urban school reform, many observers are calling for bold and brash interventions. San Diego, under Alan Bersin, is a prototype of this approach, which one of the chapters in the volume summarizes as Do it fast, do it deep, and take no prisoners. In Urban School Reform, top scholars turn their microscopes on the San Diego experiment, providing a nuanced assessment of an effort that is certain to be analyzed and argued about for years to come. Jeffrey R. Henig, Teachers College, Columbia University
Alan Bersin has been a visionary school superintendent in San Diego. He has moved with bold strokes and sought to transform the very culture of the dysfunctional school system that he inherited. This invaluable book chronicles his efforts in a thorough and balanced manner. It is essential reading for those who are serious about urban school reform. Joel Klein, Chancellor, New York City Board of Education
Each essay provides the next-best thing to being a participant-observer during the San Diego reform effort. A must-read for the committed urban school reformer. Deborah McGriff, Executive Vice President, Edison Schools
Frederick M. Hessis director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute and executive editor of Education Next. He is the author ofSpinning Wheels: The Politics of Urban School Reformand coeditor ofA Qualified Teacher in Every Classroom, also published by the Harvard Education Press."
Impatient with the slow and sometimes stagnant pace of urban school reform, many observers are calling for bold and brash interventions. San Diego, under Alan Bersin, is a prototype of this approach, which one of the chapters in the volume summarizes as Do it fast, do it deep, and take no prisoners. In Urban School Reform, top scholars turn their microscopes on the San Diego experiment, providing a nuanced assessment of an effort that is certain to be analyzed and argued about for years to come. Jeffrey R. Henig, Teachers College, Columbia University
Alan Bersin has been a visionary school superintendent in San Diego. He has moved with bold strokes and sought to transform the very culture of the dysfunctional school system that he inherited. This invaluable book chronicles his efforts in a thorough and balanced manner. It is essential reading for those who are serious about urban school reform. Joel Klein, Chancellor, New York City Board of Education
Each essay provides the next-best thing to being a participant-observer during the San Diego reform effort. A must-read for the committed urban school reformer. Deborah McGriff, Executive Vice President, Edison Schools
Frederick M. Hessis director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute and executive editor of Education Next. He is the author ofSpinning Wheels: The Politics of Urban School Reformand coeditor ofA Qualified Teacher in Every Classroom, also published by the Harvard Education Press."