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Changing Classes

Changing Classes

Changing Classes

School Reform and the New Economy
Martin Packer, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh
April 2011
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Adobe eBook Reader
9780511891496

    How do schools help to create the kind of person a child becomes? Changing Classes tells the story of a small, poor, ethnically-mixed school district in Michigan's rust-belt, a community in turmoil over the announced closing of a nearby auto assembly plant. As teachers and administrators found ways to make schooling more relevant to working-class children, two large-scale school reform initiatives swept into town: the Governor's 'market-place' reforms and the National Science Foundation's 'state systemic initiative'. All this is set against the backdrop of the transformation to a global, post-Fordist economy. The result is an account of the complex linkages at work as society structures the development of children to adulthood.

    • Describes complex interaction between economy, community and schooling
    • Accessible to a general readership, while also relevant to students and researchers interested in sociocultural psychology
    • Sociocultural approach is very popular now

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Martin Packer's Changing Classes is a tour de force. Most ethnographic studies of schooling stop short on one side or the other of the classroom door. This keeps us from a more comprehensive and deeper grasp of the complex interaction between what happens inside and outside the school. Packer, seeking a cultural account of schooling, deftly tells a vivid story of attempts to change schools creatively--through the work and play of children, teachers and administrators--in response to devastating changes in the community. He brings changing national and state political forces into this account to show us how broad, competing school reform initiatives clash with nuanced attempts at local reform. This is a remarkable achievement." Jean Lave, University of California, Berkeley

    "Offers a valuable, detailed description and analysis of educational reform...a thorough description of what 'school reform' really means, 'on-the-ground'". Journal of Curriculum Studies

    "Brings to life the dynamics of the poor, working-class community of Willow Run, struggling to survive in declining manufacturing economy and fearful of the future that lies ahead for its children...Puts the educational process and education reform into the socioeconomic context convincingly and compellingly...A timely resource for policymakers and researchers, and a challenge for reformers who think in abstractions and not through the lens of a single community struggling to do well for its children." Review of Policy Research

    "Changing Classes is a must read. Packer gives highly sensitive, compelling, interesting, and creative account of what happens to individuals, schools, and community life as a result of powerful economic and political forces. This story...reminds us how influential schools are to us personally and to those in our surrounding community." Contemporary Psychology

    "Humane, straightforward, and accessible...Will be relevant to those interested in whole-school and systemic reform. It should also be read by those concerned with developing new genres of educational research representation that are simultaneously accessible to a range of interested readers and more respectful of the research subjects." Mind, Culture, and Activity

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2000
    Paperback
    9780521645409
    332 pages
    229 × 152 × 18 mm
    0.45kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. The Class of 2001
    • 2. Blue Monday: December, 1991–February, 1992
    • 3. Vehicle of reform, drivers of change
    • 4. America's birthday
    • 5. The last First Day
    • 6. Willow run is America: the 1940s and 50s
    • 7. Crossing to the new economy
    • 8. End of year report cards
    • 9. Rest and relaxation?
    • 10. Caught in the middle
    • 11. The change game
    • 12. The future of the kids coming behind us
    • 13. Quality or equality?
    • 14. Coda
    • Notes.
      Author
    • Martin Packer , Duquesne University, Pittsburgh