Arthur G. Powell
Around 10,000 tax dollars will put a child through many public
schools for a year. About 10,000 private dollars will put him through
prep school. Why, then, is one system troubled and the other thriving,
one vilified and the other celebrated? In this book, a renowned
historian of education searches out the lessons that private schooling
might offer public education as cries for school reform grow louder.
Lessons from Privilege
explores a tradition shaped by experience and common sense, and guided
by principles that encourage community, personal relationships, and
high academic standards. These "basic" values make a profound
difference in a time when popular culture, which mocks intellectual
curiosity and celebrates mental passivity, competes so successfully for
students' attention.
Arthur Powell uses the experience of
private education to put the whole schooling enterprise in fresh
perspective. He shows how the sense of schools as special communities
can help instill passion and commitment in teachers, administrators,
and students alike--and how passion and commitment are absolutely
necessary for educational success. The power of economic resources,
invested fully in schools, also becomes pointedly clear here, as does
the value of incentives for teachers and students.
Though the
concerns this book brings into focus--for decent character and academic
literacy--may never be trendy or easily applied, Lessons from Privilege presents sensible, powerful, and profitable ideas for enhancing the humanity and dignity of education in America.