Vouchers within reason : a child-centered approach to education reform / James G. Dwyer.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Ithaca : Cornell University Press, c2002.Description: vii, 248 p. ; 24 cmISBN: - 0801439485 (alk. paper)
- KF 4137 .D98 2002
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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Storms Research Center Main Collection | KF 4137 .D98 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98618541 |
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| KF 4124 .D98 1998 Religious schools v. children's rights / | KF 4124.5 .S578 2005 FIRE's guide to free speech on campus / | KF 4125 .N6 2003 No child left behind? : the politics and practice of school accountability / | KF 4137 .D98 2002 Vouchers within reason : a child-centered approach to education reform / | KF 4155 .S53 Bakke, DeFunis, and minority admissions : the quest for equal opportunity / | KF 4155 .W54 From Brown to Bakke : the Supreme Court and school integration, 1954-1978 / | KF 4162 .C57 2006 Teachers & religion in public schools / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 217-242) and index.
Vouchers and adult-centered legal reasoning -- Education reform and adult-centered political theory -- A utilitarian assessment of vouchers -- A moral rights-based assessment -- Making sense of antiestablishment principles -- The equal protection strategy for compelling aid to religious schools -- An introduction to the real world -- A moral assessment of existing voucher programs -- Applying constitutional principles to vouchers in the real world.
Dwyer makes the case that state funding of religious and other private schools is not only permissible, but mandatory, as a moral and constitutional right of the children already in private schools. In Vouchers within reason, he also demonstrates the necessity of attaching to that funding robust standards for the content and nature of instruction and for treatment of students. These are just the sort of regulatory strings that most current supporters of vouchers fear. In the author's view, vouchers represent an opportunity for states to accomplish what they have been unable to do in the past--namely, to bring academic accountability to religious schools, many of which fail to provide a good secular education. He sees voucher programs that are now in place as morally irresponsible and clearly unconstitutional, however, because they require almost nothing of recipient schools in return for the funding.
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