Synopses & Reviews
According to master-politician Thomas Tip O'Neill, all politics is local. Edwards and Willie demonstrate the efficacy of local community action, but also show how linkage with state, regional, and national agencies helps groups in their efforts to shape educational policy and practice.
Edwards and Willie examine the notion of critical mass and its relationship to community decision making. They also analyze the assets and liabilities of coalition politics. They show that specific population groups dominant in one season, and for selected circumstances, may become subdominant at another time. Such change and flexibility, they assert, is beneficial for the total community, because no one group is able to maintain control indefinitely. Their analysis will be of considerable interest to scholars, policymakers, and administrators dealing with public education issues, as well as to parents and concerned citizens.
Synopsis
Examines the dynamics of power among racial groups in local community as they struggle with public education issues.
Synopsis
According to master-politician Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, all politics is local. Edwards and Willie demonstrate the efficacy of local community action, but also show how linkage with state, regional, and national agencies helps groups in their efforts to shape educational policy and practice.
About the Author
RALPH EDWARDS is Senior Research Associate at the Center for Innovation in Urban Education at Northeastern University.CHARLES V. WILLIE is Professor of Education and Urban Studies, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Efficacy of Local Community Action
The Hiring and Firing of Laval Wilson, Boston's First African American Superintendent of Schools
The Case of an Elected Versus an Appointed School Committee
Conclusion: Making Alliances and Building Coalitions
Index