http://firsthand.heinemann.com http://pd.heinemann.com http://www.boyntoncook.com http://www.heinemanndrama.com

Home| About Us| Contact Us| Our Authors| College Professors| Mailing List| Help | My Account| View Cart
SEARCH
BROWSE
New Titles
firsthand
Literacy
Reading
Writing
Language Arts
English Lang. Acquisition
Mathematics
Social Studies
Science
Assessment
Staff/PD
Politics of Education
Multimedia
Professional Development
More >
OTHER RESOURCES
Author Guidelines
Sales Representatives

Read a Sample Chapter
None of Our Business
Why Business Models Don’t Work in Schools

Crystal England, Wisconsin Association of Middle Level Education

ISBN 978-0-325-00444-0 / 0-325-00444-7 / 2003 / 120pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: K-12

List Price: $15.00
Earn Extra Credit! Click here to learn more.

Learn More
Description

At last—an insider's look at the insidious intrusion of corporate interests into American classrooms. Former middle school principal Crystal England makes it perfectly clear that schooling-as-business is no schooling at all. When bottom lines are more important than developing minds, then students, families, and teachers pay—and pay big.

Her book examines the assertion, and assumption, that with more front-end management and an increasingly open market, schools could experience the success of corporations—an assertion that begs the real questions:

Is education an art or an industry?
What matters most—product or process?

In each of her seven chapters, England explores exactly how and why the school-business model does not and cannot work. She addresses such issues as:

  • expectations
  • marketing
  • standards
  • the education "audience"
  • assessment
  • nontraditional environments and choice
  • legislation.
Balancing practical wisdom with current research, England makes a consistently strong case against what amounts to assembly-line education using the business model. Quality principles, sound marketing, and other basic business tenets might mold products. But in the complicated community of diversity that is today's classroom, it is the individual teacher who creates harmony out of chaos and ensures real learning despite threats and ultimatums.

Table of Contents
    1. It Takes a Village to Raise a Child
    2. To Market, To Market
    3. A Rose by Any Other Name
    4. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
    5. How Do I Test Thee?
    6. A Better Mousetrap
    7. No One Is Left Behind the Child
Also Available From Crystal England
Books
You Might Also Be Interested In...
  • Not with Our Kids You Don’t!: Ten Strategies to Save Our Schools (Paperback)
  • Reading the Naked Truth: Literacy, Legislation, and Lies (Paperback)
  • Silent No More: Voices of Courage in American Schools (Paperback)
  • Public Teaching: One Kid at a Time (Paperback)
  • Testing Is Not Teaching: What Should Count in Education (Paperback)
  • Copyright© 1999-2008 Heinemann, a division of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
    Terms of Use | Privacy Policy