Waubonsee Community College

Beyond the classroom, why school reform has failed and what parents need to do, Laurence Steinberg, with B. Bradford Brown and Sanford M. Dornbusch

Label
Beyond the classroom, why school reform has failed and what parents need to do, Laurence Steinberg, with B. Bradford Brown and Sanford M. Dornbusch
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 210-214) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Beyond the classroom
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
34113915
Responsibility statement
Laurence Steinberg, with B. Bradford Brown and Sanford M. Dornbusch
Sub title
why school reform has failed and what parents need to do
Summary
Based on a comprehensive national study of high-school students, Beyond the Classroom explains that it is parents and peers, not teachers, who have the greatest influence over a student's classroom performance. The reason so many students do badly in school is not that their schools are deficient but that their parents either don't care about their children's performance or don't show their children in positive ways that they do. Children who know that their parents value education perform much better in school than other childrenThe other great influence on school performance, according to the study reported in this book, is the peer group. Children are strongly influenced by their friends' attitudes toward school. As a group, children whose friends believe that hard work earns rewards and who value good grades do well in school. Unfortunately, according to the study, fewer than one-fifth of all students say that their friends believe it is important to get good grades. For the most part, adolescent peer culture demeans school success and scorns those students who try to do well in school. The peer culture is so powerful that it can even undermine the positive contributions of parentsThe study on which this book is based also found striking and consistent ethnic differences in student performance, differences that cut across socioeconomic groups. African-American and Latino students lag behind their peers while Asian-American students - even in the very same school - perform at the highest levels. Beyond the Classroom explains why this is and offers answers that will help all students, regardless of ethnic background, to do better in school. Beyond the Classroom identifies the real nature of the education crisis in America. It explains why some students succeed brilliantly while others flounder and draws valuable lessons about the nature of successful parental and peer group support
Table Of Contents
1. The Real Problem -- 2. A Nation at Risk, A Nation in Denial -- 3. School Reform is Not the Solution -- 4. Disengaged Students -- 5. Ethnicity and Adolescent Achievement -- 6. The Power of Authoritative Parenting -- 7. The Home Environment of Academically Successful Students -- 8. The Power of Peers -- 9. All Work and All Play Makes Jack a Dumb Boy -- 10. Beyond the Classroom
Content
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