Sunday, May 20, 2007

The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto

I've wanted to read this forever but was always put off by the price tag--imagine my surprise when I found it at a library sale. Anyway, it was terribly disappointing. I didn't trust his credentials to address the topic and the text seemed to meander.

1 comment:

  1. I must dsagree -- this is a highly-worthy book,
    fully deserving of a patient approach,
    the same "love of learning" approach
    needed for Melville's "Moby Dick"
    -- namely, an unhurried eagerness
    to share the personal stories and insights
    of a life-long "hands-on" expert,
    as he seeks to shine bright light
    on a strange aspect of our world.

    Gatto's thin book, "Dumbing Us Down",
    showed me why I hated school as a kid,
    even as I loved books, libraries, and learning.

    "Underground History of American Education"
    is Gatto's impressive work to share his research to answer a vital question:
    How and why did it happen
    -- that our freedom-loving democratic nation
    begin to rely on freedom-less schools,
    so devoid of any real democratic ideals?

    Read it, if you care
    about the daily plight
    of our kids in our schools,
    and how our industrial model of school
    became seen and accepted as "normal"!

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