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Rethinking High School: Best Practice in Teaching, Learning, and Leadership / Edition 1
Barnes and Noble
Rethinking High School: Best Practice in Teaching, Learning, and Leadership / Edition 1
Current price: $46.35
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Barnes and Noble
Rethinking High School: Best Practice in Teaching, Learning, and Leadership / Edition 1
Current price: $46.35
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We’ve read educational essays packed with ideas, and we’ve read narrative accounts of individual schools.
Rethinking High School
is a rare and delightful marriage of the two. . . . It’s hard to imagine anyone involved with high schools who won’t come away from this book both impressed and enlightened.
Alfie Kohn, Author of
The Case Against Standardized Testing
and
The Schools Our Children Deserve
is an important book for anyone who has ever wondered about what high schools could look like at their best. . . . This is a book for dreamers and doers, a book that shows us that ordinary people working together can accomplish the extraordinary. Daniels, Bizar, and Zemelman show us how.
William Ayers, Professor of Education, the University of Illinois at Chicago, Coeditor of
A Simple Justice: The Challenge of Small Schools
Secondary educators will cherish this book, as it will promote important conversations in their staff rooms and improved practice in their classrooms. The authors help us reimagine public education with page after page of practical and simultaneously profound ideas. Readers will wish Best Practice High School were just around their corner.
Shelley Harwayne, Acting Superintendent, Community School District Two, Manhattan
Anyone who seriously wants to make high schools better should start right here. Organized around the principles of "best practice,"
is packed with rich examples of wonderful learning, great teaching, substantive curriculum, democratic organization, and all the other ingredients of a really good school.
James Beane, Author of
Curriculum Integration: Designing the Core of Democratic Education
Today, as our nation’s attention turns to the reform of secondary education,
offers a lively guide for that crucial journey of renewal.
In their previous book
Best Practice: New Standards for Teaching and Learning in America’s Schools
Daniels and his colleagues drew on the national curriculum standards to define good teaching and learning. Then, the authors personally put those standards to work on the West side of Chicago, starting the city’s first new public high school in thirty years. Now, in
, they take us along on that adventure, from the earliest planning meetings to the school’s first graduation six years later. They tell exactly how Best Practice High School got started, what worked and what didn’t, where they stumbled and soared, and what is still left to do.
But this is more than the story of one innovative school.
is designed to be a template for change. Organized around eleven fundamental choices that all secondary schools must make, the book serves as a checklist, an agenda, and a study guide for high school reform. Instead of dictating right answers, the authors pose key questions and recount a range of creative alternatives developed by schools around the country. By offering this rich array of stories and models, the book speaks directly to readers who wish to improve existing high schools, to break larger schools into smaller ones, or start new high schools from the ground up.
complete with a companion websitearticulates a clear vision of successful secondary school reform. Acknowledging the monumental challenges of renewing high schools, it shows how ordinary but determined people, working together, can accomplish the extraordinary.
Rethinking High School
is a rare and delightful marriage of the two. . . . It’s hard to imagine anyone involved with high schools who won’t come away from this book both impressed and enlightened.
Alfie Kohn, Author of
The Case Against Standardized Testing
and
The Schools Our Children Deserve
is an important book for anyone who has ever wondered about what high schools could look like at their best. . . . This is a book for dreamers and doers, a book that shows us that ordinary people working together can accomplish the extraordinary. Daniels, Bizar, and Zemelman show us how.
William Ayers, Professor of Education, the University of Illinois at Chicago, Coeditor of
A Simple Justice: The Challenge of Small Schools
Secondary educators will cherish this book, as it will promote important conversations in their staff rooms and improved practice in their classrooms. The authors help us reimagine public education with page after page of practical and simultaneously profound ideas. Readers will wish Best Practice High School were just around their corner.
Shelley Harwayne, Acting Superintendent, Community School District Two, Manhattan
Anyone who seriously wants to make high schools better should start right here. Organized around the principles of "best practice,"
is packed with rich examples of wonderful learning, great teaching, substantive curriculum, democratic organization, and all the other ingredients of a really good school.
James Beane, Author of
Curriculum Integration: Designing the Core of Democratic Education
Today, as our nation’s attention turns to the reform of secondary education,
offers a lively guide for that crucial journey of renewal.
In their previous book
Best Practice: New Standards for Teaching and Learning in America’s Schools
Daniels and his colleagues drew on the national curriculum standards to define good teaching and learning. Then, the authors personally put those standards to work on the West side of Chicago, starting the city’s first new public high school in thirty years. Now, in
, they take us along on that adventure, from the earliest planning meetings to the school’s first graduation six years later. They tell exactly how Best Practice High School got started, what worked and what didn’t, where they stumbled and soared, and what is still left to do.
But this is more than the story of one innovative school.
is designed to be a template for change. Organized around eleven fundamental choices that all secondary schools must make, the book serves as a checklist, an agenda, and a study guide for high school reform. Instead of dictating right answers, the authors pose key questions and recount a range of creative alternatives developed by schools around the country. By offering this rich array of stories and models, the book speaks directly to readers who wish to improve existing high schools, to break larger schools into smaller ones, or start new high schools from the ground up.
complete with a companion websitearticulates a clear vision of successful secondary school reform. Acknowledging the monumental challenges of renewing high schools, it shows how ordinary but determined people, working together, can accomplish the extraordinary.