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Effective Partnering for School Change
Improving Early Childhood Education in Urban Classrooms

Jie-Qi Chen, Patricia Horsch, Karen DeMoss and Suzanne L. Wagner
Foreword by Barbara T. Bowman
Early Childhood Education Series
Pub Date: November 2003, 176 pages

Paperback: $22.95, ISBN: 0807744131
Cloth: $46, ISBN: 080774914X
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"The Schools Project team had to cope with everything from system-wide reform mandates to racial and cultural conflicts…. This book is a testament to the belief that the principles of early childhood development and learning are universal, and it is our job to find out how to get the principles to work locally.&qoot;
—From the Foreword by Barbara T. Bowman

"Almost everyone has something to say about how our schools ought to be changed; almost no one knows where or how to begin. In Effective Partnering for School Change, the authors not only know where to begin, they know how to persevere in the face of complex and challenging circumstances."
William Ayers, Distinguished Professor of Education, University of Illinois at Chicago

This volume explores the challenges and promise of university–school partnerships as a vehicle for improving our public schools. Reporting on the experience of Erikson Institute’s Schools Project—an 11-year initiative involving nine public elementary schools in low-income Chicago neighborhoods—the authors describe a variety of school-based interventions and provide valuable lessons for building effective university–school partnerships. Speaking to today’s important issues, this book:

  • Covers a range of topics in early childhood education (pre-K–Grade 3), including high-stakes standardized testing, a child-centered curriculum, the social-emotional development of children, behavioral management, and the effective uses of technology.
  • Emphasizes the quality and nature of the partner relationship as the critical factor in the process of achieving school change.
  • Incorporates the voices and opinions of both sides of the partnership, revealing the varied issues and competing agendas that shape these collaborations.
  • Summarizes the major lessons learned, offering experience-based guidance on building and sustaining a university-school partnership that can serve as a foundation for improved teaching and learning, especially with young urban children.

Jie-Qi Chen is an associate professor of child development and early education at Erikson Institute. Patricia Horsch is the director of a primary school partnership between Erikson Institute and the Chicago Public Schools and an adjunct professor of education at Erikson. Karen DeMoss is an assistant professor in the educational leadership program at the University of New Mexico. Suzanne L. Wagner is a research associate at Project Match in Chicago.


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