Visions of Schooling Conscience, Community and Common Education Rosemary C. Salomone

Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
01 Jun 2000
ISBN:
9780300081190
Dimensions:
336 pages: 234 x 156 x 25mm

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At no time in the past century have there been fiercer battles over American state schools than there are now. Parents and educational reformers are challenging not only the mission, content, and structure of mass compulsory schooling but also its underlying premise - that the values promoted through public education are neutral and therefore acceptable to any reasonable person. In this important book, Rosemary Salomone sets aside the ideological and inflammatory rhetoric that surrounds today's debates over educational values and family choice. She offers instead a fair-minded examination of education for democratic citizenship in a society that values freedom of conscience and religious pluralism. And she proposes a balanced course of action that redefines but does not sever the relationship between education and the state. Salomone demonstrates how contemporary conflicts are the product of past educational and social movements. She lays bare some of the myths that support the current government monopoly over education and reveals how it privileges those of economic means. Through a detailed case study of a recent controversy in a suburban New York school district, the author explores the legal and policy issues that arise when widely disparate world views stand in the way of political compromise on educational materials, techniques, and programmes. Salomone builds a case for educational governance that places the developmental needs of the child at the centre of family autonomy. She advances a plan that respects diverse values and visions of schooling while preserving the core commitments that bind our nation.

Rosemary C. Salomone is professor of law at St. John's University School of Law and a fellow of the Open Society Institute.

"Salomone, fully appreciating the dangers posed by the statists on the one hand and the radical individualists on the other, makes her own proposal a model of fairness and balance." John F. Coons, University of California at Berkeley School of Law