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Fertilizers, Pills, and Magnetic Strips
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24 February 2008

"We shape our tools and then they shape us." With these words, Kenneth Boulding captured one of the great truths of the modern world. In Fertilizers, Pills, and Magnetic Strips, Gene V Glass analyzes how a few key technological inventions changed culture in America and how public education has changed as a result. Driving these changes are material self-interest and the desire for comfort and security, both of which have transformed American culture into a hyper-consuming, xenophobic society that is systematically degrading public education.
Glass shows how the central education policy debates at the start of the 21st century (vouchers, charter schools, tax credits, high-stakes testing, bilingual education) are actually about two underlying issues: how can the costs of public education be cut, and how can the education of the White middle-class be "quasi-privatized" at public expense? Working from the demographic realities of the past thirty years, he projects a challenging and disturbing future for public education in America.
Preface
Part I. The Drumbeat of Reform
Chapter 1. The Endless Narrative of Education Reform
Chapter 2. Transforming Education: Ordo Ab Chao
Part II. Fertilizers, Pills, and Magnetic Strips
Chapter 3. Fertilizers and Tractors: The Rural to Urban Migration
Chapter 4. Pills… That Prevent Conception or Extend Life
Chapter 5. Magnetic Strips: Easy Credit and the American economy
Chapter 6. America is Growing Browner, Older, and Deeper in Debt
Part III. What Accountability Means
Chapter 7. Robots, Cars, and 4BR/2.5BA
Chapter 8. Reforming the Schools: Making Some Cheap and Others Private
Chapter 9. Accountability and Ethnicity
Part IV. Looking Forward
Chapter 10. What Is the Fate of Public Education in America?