Contributions

  • Dempsey, Van O., 1960- - Contributor

Publication

1996 - State University of New York Press, Albany, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

56,250 words, Guess

Page Count

225 pages

Identifiers

  • Internet Archivesocialconstructi0000nobl
  • ISBN-100791430790
  • ISBN-100791430804
  • ISBN-139780791430798
  • ISBN-139780791430804
and 9 more
  • Goodreads4234292', '4776800
  • LibraryThing5927000
  • Library of Congress Control Number95039477
  • OCLC Control Number33440473
  • Better World BooksO7-AZW-910
  • Better World Books9780791430804
  • Better World Books9780791430798
  • Better World BooksO6-CLY-912
  • Open LibraryOL803018M

Classifications

  • DDC370.11/4/0973
  • LCCLC311 .N56 1996
  • LCCLC311.N56 1996

Description

It's time to face an inevitable conclusion: School reform does not reform schools. That's because reform movements conceive of schools as being about transmitting knowledge. Yet, schools are not primarily about knowledge. They are about the construction of meaning and morality in the lives of students and communities. In this book, the authors argue that to break this recycling of reform efforts, we must understand how schools construct moral life. The focus is on two elementary schools: Rougement, an historically African American school that was closed during school desegregation in the 1970s, and Cedar Grove, an historically white school to which the former Rougement students were sent. Described are the histories of these schools, the communities in which they are located, and some of the people who influenced and were influenced by the schools. From those contexts the authors then make explicit the "virtues" that these communities and schools constructed and valued, and describe how those virtues came to influence lives. The oral histories of the two schools and their communities provide the basis of a novel critique of the value conflict that has characterized educational reform in this country. The social construction of virtue offers an alternative perspective on the moral purpose of schooling in America.

Subjects

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