Teachers College Press 
 









The Comprehensive High School Today


Floyd Hammack, Editor
School Reform
Pub Date: April 2004, 176 pages

Paperback: $23.95, ISBN: 0807744557
Cloth: $48, ISBN: 0807744565
Add to Cart View Cart

:

"Does the comprehensive high school—the dominant form of secondary school in the U.S.—have relevance today? At a time when policy debates now turn toward high school reform, Floyd Hammack has gathered a distinguished group to assess current reform efforts in their sociological and historical context, taking into account the vision of James B. Conant, the major proponent of the comprehensive high school. This timely book:

  • Examines how higher education has expanded in the post–World War II era and the consequences of secondary education: high rates of academic competition and disengagement, failure, drop out, violence, and disorder.
  • Discusses the "core dilemma" of secondary education—how to serve everyone and still give students a competitive advantage.
  • Focuses on how secondary education has been affected by urban and suburban development, demographics, racial segregation and desegregation, the rise of a distinctive youth culture, and the economy.
  • Sheds light on why the context in which instruction takes place sets parameters for the nature of what can be taught and learned.
  • Raises a number of critical issues about the social forces that create barriers to significant reform and provides a perspective from which to better view the multiple purposes of the high school."

New Books | Browse by Subject | TCP Series | Authors & Events | Information Desk
Links | Free Brochures | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
© 2000 Teachers College Press. All Rights Reserved