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Making Schools That Are Good For Kids - by Tom Durrie (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- MAKING SCHOOLS THAT ARE GOOD FOR KIDS: CREATING A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETYHow can we make a democratic society when our kids are subjected to the authoritarian dictatorship of school?Isn't it time we thought of something completely new?This book is about a school that has no classes, no grades, no tests, no marks, and no teachers.
- Author(s): Tom Durrie
- 164 Pages
- Education, Aims & Objectives
Description
About the Book
This book is about a radical restructuring of the school system..
Book Synopsis
MAKING SCHOOLS THAT ARE GOOD FOR KIDS: CREATING A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETYHow can we make a democratic society when our kids are subjected to the authoritarian dictatorship of school?Isn't it time we thought of something completely new?This book is about a school that has no classes, no grades, no tests, no marks, and no teachers. Decisions regarding conduct, behaviour, and community relations will be made by democratic assembly in which each person, regardless of age or position, has one vote. Is this a school that is good for kids? Would it be good for society? Obviously I think so or I wouldn't be writing this book. And, also obviously, I believe that schools as they now exist are not good for kids-or anyone else.In this book I will address what might replace the schools that have dominated the lives of the young for the past 150 years or so, and are now, with the growth of institutional daycare and preschool, insinuating their ideals of child management into our daily lives, especially the lives of our children. The school system cannot be "reformed." Only a radical transformation can make a difference.
Review Quotes
Tom Durrie (b. 1931) is a school critic, a nonagenarian giant, and a poster boy for longevity and vitality of a happy brain. His biography is rich beyond description, and reflects Durrie's infinite passion for life. His CV would suffice to fill in a few lifetimes, and is the best testimony that a rich and productive life is a self-sustaining process.--Piotr Wozniak, PhD, SuperMemo Research, Poland
Your book plays into such a crucial topic in today's education; I appreciate and admire your persistence in continuing the conversation! --Em Wisniewski, Marketing and Communication Specialist, Prescott College, Prescott Arizona
Interested in homeschooling your children? Looking for reasons why? Read this book. Filled with facts and astute humorous observations, this book exposes the many ironic results of school.. Anyone interested in education and how to support children to thrive will benefit from the author's many years of experience working with children both in and outside of the educational system and his many years of observing how humans learn.
--Marty Layne, homeschool mom of four, author of Learning At Home: A Mother's Guide To Homeschooling, Newly Revised Edition