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| Foreword | p. xiii |
| Preface | p. xvi |
| Introduction: Critical Issues and Critical Thinking | p. 1 |
| Introduction | p. 2 |
| Democratic Vitality and Educational Criticism | p. 9 |
| The Political Context of Schooling | p. 14 |
| A Tradition of School Criticism and Reform | p. 15 |
| Whose Interests Should Schools Serve? Justice and Equity | |
| School Choice: Family or Publ... MORE | p. 52 |
| Is family choice of schools in the public interest? | p. 52 |
| For Family Choice in Education | p. 52 |
| Against Vouchers | p. 61 |
| Financing Schools: Equity or Disparity | p. 75 |
| Is it desirable to equalize educational spending among school districts within a state or across the nation? | p. 75 |
| For Justice in Educational Finance | p. 75 |
| Against Centralization in Educational Financing | p. 84 |
| Gender Equity: Eliminating Discrimination or Accommodating Difference | p. 97 |
| Is it ever necessary to create schools or classroom settings that separate students by gender? | p. 97 |
| Eliminating Discrimination | p. 97 |
| Accommodating Differences | p. 105 |
| Standards-Based Reform: Real Change or Political Smoke Screen | p. 116 |
| Will the standards-based reform movement improve education or discriminate against poor and disadvantaged students? | p. 116 |
| Standards-Based Reform Promises Quality Education for All Students | p. 116 |
| Standards-Based Reform is a Political Smoke Screen | p. 125 |
| Religion and Public Schools: Unification or Separation | p. 138 |
| How do schools find a balance between freedom of religious expression and the separation of church and state? | p. 138 |
| For Religious Freedom in Schools | p. 138 |
| Against Violating the Separation between Church and State | p. 147 |
| Privatization of Schools: Boon or Bane | p. 159 |
| What criteria are most suitable for deciding whether schools are better when they are operated as a public or private enterprise? | p. 159 |
| Public Schools Should be Privatized | p. 159 |
| Public Schools Should be Public | p. 167 |
| Corporations, Commerce, and Schools: Complementing or Competing Interests | p. 184 |
| Does school support become corporate support? | p. 184 |
| Businesses are School Partners | p. 184 |
| Commercializing the School | p. 194 |
| New Immigrants and the Schools: Unfair Burden or Business as Usual | p. 210 |
| Should schools offer free opportunity to all children of new immigrants? | p. 210 |
| Schools Should Offer Educational Opportunities to All Children of New Immigrants. | p. 210 |
| Bad Policy Overburdens Schools | p. 218 |
| What Should be Taught? Knowledge and Literacy | |
| The Academic Achievement Gap: Old Remedies or New | p. 243 |
| Are already existing policies and practices reducing the academic achievement gap or are new measures needed? | p. 243 |
| For Maintaining Existing Programs | p. 243 |
| For Innovative Solutions | p. 254 |
| Values/Character Education: Traditional or Liberational | p. 265 |
| Which and whose values should public schools teach, and why? | p. 265 |
| Teach Traditional Values | p. 265 |
| Liberation Through Active Value Inquiry | p. 273 |
| Multicultural Education: Democratic or Divisive | p. 289 |
| Should schools emphasize America's cultural diversity or the shared aspects of American culture? | p. 289 |
| Multiculturalism: Central to a Democratic Education | p. 289 |
| Multiculturalism is Divisive and Destructive | p. 297 |
| Technology and Learning: Enabling or Subverting | p. 309 |
| What technology deserves significant school attention and who should decide? | p. 309 |
| Technology Enables Learning | p. 309 |
| Technology Can Subvert Learning | p. 319 |
| Standardized Testing: Restrict or Expand | p. 335 |
| Should the use of standardized school tests be increased or decreased? | p. 335 |
| For Restricting Testing | p. 335 |
| For Expanding Testing | p. 343 |
| How Should Schools Be Organized And Operated? School Environment | |
| Discipline and Justice: Zero Tolerance or Discretion | p. 363 |
| What concept of justice should govern school and classroom discipline? | p. 363 |
| Zero-Tolerance Disciplinary Policies Provide Justice in Public Schools | p. 363 |
| Zero-Tolerance Discipline Policies are Fundamentally Unjust | p. 371 |
| Teacher Unions and School Leadership: Detrimental or Beneficial | p. 382 |
| Should teachers and their unions be given a larger role in running public schools? | p. 382 |
| Teachers and Teacher Unions Should Play a Major Role in School Leadership | p. 382 |
| Teachers and Teacher Unions Should Not Play a Role in School Leadership | p. 389 |
| Academic Freedom: Teacher Rights or Responsibilities | p. 400 |
| How should the proper balance between teacher freedom and responsibility be determined? | p. 400 |
| For Increased Academic Freedom | p. 400 |
| For Teacher Responsibility | p. 411 |
| Inclusion and Mainstreaming: Common or Special Education | p. 425 |
| When and why should selected children be provided inclusive or special treatment in schools? | p. 425 |
| For Full Inclusion | p. 425 |
| Special Programs Help Special Students | p. 434 |
| Violence in Schools: School Treatable or Beyond School Control | p. 451 |
| Can schools deal effectively with violent or potentially violent students? | p. 451 |
| Schools Can and Should Curb Violence | p. 451 |
| The Problem of School Violence is Beyond School Control | p. 457 |
| Index | p. 469 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |