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Paperback Leave No Child Behind: Preparing Today's Youth for Tomorrow's World Book

ISBN: 0300109679

ISBN13: 9780300109672

Leave No Child Behind: Preparing Today's Youth for Tomorrow's World

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The call-to-arms to "leave no child behind" in America has become popularly associated with the Bush administration's education plan--a plan that actually diverges greatly from the ideals of the Children's Defense Fund, which originated the concept. Here, in a bold and engaging new book, Dr. James Comer reclaims this now-famous exhortation as a tool for positive and substantive change. Far removed from the federal government's focus on standardized testing as the panacea for our educational ills, Dr. Comer's argument--drawn from his own experiences as the creator of the School Development Program--urges teachers, policymakers, and parents alike to work toward creating a new kind of school environment. In so doing, Dr. Comer reignites a crucial debate as he details the evolution and many successes of his School Development Program since its inception thirty-five years ago, and he illustrates how his model for change has proven effective in public schools throughout the country. Most important, he offers proof that students from all backgrounds can learn at a high level, adopt positive behavioral attitudes, and prepare for a fulfilling adult life, if they learn in schools that provide adequate support for their complete development--schools that know that leaving no child behind should be much more than just a convenient political slogan.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Development is essential

Comer's book offers an essential addition to curriculum and a complex description of the many instances of practice in which his proposal has been tested and found useful. One point that he did not mention is that throughout the country education is considered to be a social science in which all processes and relationships are causal; as he does say there is a presumption of no choice on the part of children. This seems to me to go hand-in-hand with the fact that except for the work of Matthew Lipman and Richard Paul philosophy is never taught at the primary and secondary school. Comer's book makes sense!
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