Learning Power: Organizing for Education and Justice

Front Cover
Teachers College Press, Apr 24, 2006 - Education - 205 pages

In cities across the nation, low-income African American and Latino parents hope that their children's education will bring a better life. But their schools, typically, are overcrowded, ill equipped, and shamefully under-staffed. Unless things change dramatically, more than half the students will never graduate and many will face a life of poverty-wage work. Learning Power documents a radical approach to school reform that includes: grassroots public activism informed by social inquiry as the best way to realize Brown v. Board of Education's promise of "education on equal terms"; activist young people, teachers, parents, and community organizations working to improve schools in our nation's poorest neighborhoods; the voices, images, and actions of people who are organizing to fight for better schools; and a comprehensive critique of the prevailing logic of American schooling and an alternative logic based on justice and participatory democracy.

Here are the best arguments against those who want to give up on public schools in America. Read Learning Power for clear examples of how ordinary people can influence schooling through their organizing and social critique.

 

Contents

II
1
IV
7
VI
8
VII
16
VIII
19
IX
21
X
22
XI
24
XXXIV
105
XXXV
107
XXXVI
109
XXXVII
111
XL
114
XLI
121
XLII
124
XLIII
128

XII
26
XIII
29
XIV
33
XV
34
XVI
35
XVII
37
XVIII
38
XIX
41
XX
43
XXI
46
XXII
49
XXIII
65
XXIV
66
XXV
69
XXVI
71
XXVIII
73
XXIX
79
XXX
93
XXXI
97
XXXIII
101
XLIV
131
XLV
134
XLVI
137
XLVII
145
XLVIII
146
XLIX
147
L
149
LI
151
LII
153
LIII
157
LIV
158
LV
163
LVI
173
LVII
176
LVIII
178
LIX
180
LX
190
LXI
199
LXII
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2006)

Jeannie Oakes is Presidential Professor in Educational Equity and Director of UCLA's Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access (IDEA). John Rogers is the Associate Director of IDEA and the founding editor of "Teaching to Change LA", an online journal. Martin Lipton is Communications Analyst at IDEA and a former public high school teacher.

Bibliographic information