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Book reviews for "Campbell,_Lawrence_James" sorted by average review score:
It Takes a City: Getting Serious About Urban School Reform
Published in Paperback by The Brookings Institution (2000)
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Where's the Teacher?
Atoms and waves
Published in Unknown Binding by Routledge & K. Paul ()
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Projects in Physics
Published in Paperback by Taylor & Francis Books Ltd (14 May, 1981)
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Projects: an "A" Level physics course
Published in Unknown Binding by Edward Arnold ()
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Science: The Basic Skills
Published in Paperback by Taylor & Francis Books Ltd (31 August, 1978)
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A Selection of the Best Inns & Pubs in the Eastern Counties
Published in Paperback by Studio (1992)
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Stress and Well-Being at Work: Assessments and Interventions for Occupational Mental Health
Published in Paperback by American Psychological Association (APA) (1992)
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This writer clearly identifies a target audience -- mayors, civic leaders and school board members. By decision, it excludes teachers and students. It's sad to think -- and I've seen this happen -- that ivory tower bureaucrarts actually make decisions based on this type of dubious theory rather than getting down in the trenches with the reality of the classroom.
Content here is peppered with educratic jargon which twists other terminology into bastardized educational theories. School "incubators" make me think of premature babies."Real dollar budgets" make me wonder if bureaucrats are playing Monopoly with our taxes. "CEO Strong Schools strategy" pretends that a principal, who is middle management, is a CEO. Get real. The only CEO in the school district is the superintendent who is hired by an elected school board.
This book, to it's credit, recognizes the inability of reform to reform anything (last paragraph, page 84). Any good book offers new insights and "policy churn" gets my prize here. Teachers are jaded by bandwagon bureaucrats who recycle new versions of old ideas, one after another, never saying, "stop this" or "drop that."
Hillary Clinton quotes the African proverb, "It Takes a Village." This book spins the idea into, "a city." I'm waiting for the next trendy realization for someone to discover that, "It takes a teacher."