Parents and schools : the 150-year struggle for control in American education
著者
書誌事項
Parents and schools : the 150-year struggle for control in American education
University of Chicago Press, c2000
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Who holds ultimate authority for the education of America's children - teachers or parents? Although the relationship between home and school has changed dramatically over the decades, William Cutler's fascinating history argues that it has always been a political one, and his book uncovers for the first time how and why the balance of power has shifted over time. Starting with parental dominance in the mid-19th century, Cutler chronicles how schools' growing bureaucratization and professionalization allowed educators to gain increasing control over the schooling and lives of the children they taught. Central to his story is the role of parent-teacher associations, which helped transform an adversarial relationship into a collaborative one. Yet parents have also been controlled by educators through PTAs, leading to the pereption that they are "company unions". Cutler shows how in the 1920s and 1930s schools expanded their responsibility for children's well-being outside the classroom. These efforts sowed the seeds for later conflict as schools came to be held accountable for solving society's problems.
Finally, he brings the reader into recent decades, in which a breakdown of trust, racial tension and "parents' rights" have taken the story full circle, with parents and schools once again at odds. Cutler's book is a valuable guide to understanding how parent-teacher cooperation, so essential for our children's educational success, might be achieved.
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