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This book argues that the structure of public education is a key factor in the failure of America's public education system to fulfill the intellectual, civic, and moral aims for which it was created. The book challenges the philosophical basis for the traditional common school model and defends the educational pluralism that most liberal democracies enjoy. Berner provides a unique theoretical pathway that is neither libertarian nor state-focused and a pragmatic pathway that avoids the winner-takes-all approach of many contemporary debates about education. For the first time in nearly one hundred fifty years, changing the underlying structure of America’s public education system is both plausible and possible, and this book attempts to set out why and how.
198 pages, Kindle Edition
Published November 11, 2016
It is no secret that American education leaves many students behind intellectually, civically, and morally. Educational leaders disagree about why this is so. I argue in this book that much of the fault lies with two wrong turns that should be reversed: first, the nineteenth-century political decision to favor a uniform structure over a plural one; second, the twentieth-century abandonment of a traditional, academic curriculum.
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America’s restrictive public education system stands in sharp contrast to the educational pluralism that other democratic nations take for granted… For example, the Netherlands supports 35 different types of schools on equal footing; England, Belgium, Sweden, and most of the provinces of Canada also provide mechanisms for parental choice.
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Educational pluralism offers a different way of doing public education by accommodating both individual belief and the common good. And it suggests a way out of the winner-takes-all mentality that characterizes so many educational debates today. Within this new framework, we must also continue to raise academic expectations by embracing a content-rich, subject-oriented liberal-arts curriculum. Initiatives such as the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) are a necessary but insufficient step in this direction.
Educational philosophies answer the questions of how we should educate the child and why. These questions do not stand on their own, however. They automatically engage deeper understandings of human nature, the meaning of human life, the source of authority, moral responsibility, and the just society.