The Shame of The Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America by Jonathan Kozol

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The Shame of the Nation: Overview

“The Shame of The Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America,” is a book that tells the story of author, Jonathan Kozol’s, journey through the public school system. He looks deeper into inner-city, low-income schools and the re-segregation that has taken place. Kozol focuses on the struggles those children of poor and minorities face while trying to achieve equal education as those of the middle and upper class. This book gives a vivid description of what is happening in schools across the country and our failure as a nation to provide ALL students with the education that they deserve through the observations, interviews, and experiences of author Jonathan Kozol. Through this book he tries to shed light on what is really going on in schools across the nation and what most people are not aware of. “Many Americans I meet who live far from our major cities and who have no first-hand knowledge of realities in urban public schools seem to have a rather vague and general impression that the great extremes of racial isolation they recall as matters of grave national significance some 35 to 40 years ago have gradually, but steadily, diminished in more recent years (Kozol 18).”

“One of the most disheartening experiences for those who grew up in the years when Martin Luther King and Thurgood Marshall were alive is to visit public schools today that bear their names, or names of other honored leaders of the integration struggles that produced the temporary progress that took place in three decades after Brown, and to find how many of these schools are bastions of contemporary segregation (Kozol 22).” As the book begins, Kozol examines the current state of segregation in urban school...

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...eel." -- Carol Buchner. My goal as a teacher and what I believe is the part that I play in making sure all children have an equal chance at education is to make sure that I make a difference in the life of a child every time that I walk through my classroom door.

References

Aronson, Joshua. (2004, November). Closing the Achievement Gap: The Threat of Stereotype. Educational Leadership 62 (3).

Barton, P. E. (2004). Why does the gap persist?. Educational Leadership, 62, 8-13.

Kozol, J. (2006). The shame of the nation: The restoration of apartheid schooling in America. Random House Digital, Inc..

Landsmen, Julie. (2004, November) Closing the Achievement Gap: Confronting the Racism of Low Expectations. Educational Leadership 62 (3).

Rothstein, Richard (2004, November). The Achievement Gap: A Boarder Picture. Educational Leadership 62 (3).

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