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    Oddfellow's Orphanage

    Emily Winfield Martin 9780375869952

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The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985

by Steven Brint

The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In the twentieth century, Americans have increasingly looked to the schools--and, in particular, to the nation's colleges and universities--as guardians of the cherished national ideal of equality of opportunity. With the best jobs increasingly monopolized by those with higher education, the opportunity to attend college has become an integral part of the American dream of upward mobility. The two-year college--which now enrolls more than four million students in over 900 institutions--is a central expression of this dream, and its invention at the turn of the century constituted one of the great innovations in the history of American education. By offering students of limited means the opportunity to start higher education at home and to later transfer to a four-year institution, the two-year school provided a major new pathway to a college diploma--and to the nation's growing professional and managerial classes.

But in the past two decades, the community college has undergone a profound change, shifting its emphasis from liberal-arts transfer courses to terminal vocational programs. Drawing on developments nationwide as well as in the specific case of Massachusetts, Steven Brint and Jerome Karabel offer a history of community colleges in America, explaining why this shift has occurred after years of student resistance and examining its implications for upward mobility. As the authors argue in this exhaustively researched and pioneering study, the junior college has always faced the contradictory task of extending a college education to the hitherto excluded, while diverting the majority of them from the nation's four-year colleges and universities. Very early on, two-year college administrators perceived vocational training for "semi-professional" work as their and their students' most secure long-term niche in the educational hierarchy. With two thirds of all community college students enrolled in vocational programs, the authors contend that the dream of education as a route to upward mobility, as well as the ideal of equal educational opportunity for all, are seriously threatened.

With the growing public debate about the state of American higher education and with more than half of all first-time degree-credit students now enrolled in community colleges, a full-scale, historically grounded examination of their place in American life is long overdue. This landmark study provides such an examination, and in so doing, casts critical light on what is distinctive not only about American education, but American society itself.

About the Author

About the Authors:

Steven Brint is Associate Professor of Sociology at Yale University and Visiting Scholar at Harvard University (1988-89). Jerome Karabel, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, has written widely on American higher education, and is a senior editor of Theory and Society.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780195048162
With:
Brint, Steven
Author:
Karabel, Jerome
Author:
null, Jerome
Author:
Brint, Steven
Author:
null, Steven
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Location:
New York :
Subject:
Higher
Subject:
History
Subject:
Philosophy & Social Aspects
Subject:
Education, humanistic
Subject:
Philosophy & Aspects
Subject:
Sociology | Education
Subject:
Education, Higher -- United States -- History.
Subject:
Community colleges -- United States.
Subject:
Education-Higher Education
Edition Description:
Bibliography: p. 271-299.
Series Volume:
6
Publication Date:
19910231
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Illustrations:
3 maps
Pages:
336
Dimensions:
9.2 x 6.1 x 0.9 in 1.25 lb

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