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Break These Chains: The Battle for School Choice
 
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Break These Chains: The Battle for School Choice [Hardcover]

Daniel McGroarty (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

April 17, 1996
Frustrated and angry that their children are not getting the solid education their tax dollars should provide, parents everywhere have lost faith in the public school system. A testimony to this frustration, low-income parents in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, seized their district's school choice initiative and used it to renounce public education, demanding the right to send their children to successful schools where learning counts.

"A story that must be told. . . . Wonderfully told."
— Ben J. Wattenberg, author of Values Matter Most


Break These Chains is a street-level account of Milwaukee's school-choice program, the first such publicly funded program in the United States. Daniel McGroarty details the battle of these inner-city parents fighting to free their children from a failing public education system. The reader goes inside the classrooms and courtrooms, down the hallways of bureaucracies, and right into the middle of political and personal power struggles.

Break These Chains is the story of individuals who, despite relentless opposition from teachers' unions, school boards, and local politicians, demanded the right to send their children to good schools and won. In detailed, heart-wrenching accounts, McGroarty illustrates what can happen when low-income parents fight institutionalized poverty.

This book shows how school choice can work effectively, offering parents an alternative to the public schools assigned to them and hope for those trapped in a stagnant system. Break These Chains demonstrates how school choice is a revolution for education in America.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Nothing scares teacher unions like the word "voucher." McGroarty slips behind all the theorizing that has gone on in the name of school choice. He looks at what actually happened when Milwaukee decided to allow public dollars to finance the private education of some of its poorest students. McGroarty does not ignore the enormous political implications of Milwaukee's success, but his book is most noteworthy for its detailed reporting and the humane treatment of its subjects.

From Publishers Weekly

In 1990, Milwaukee launched the nation's first voucher program providing publicly funded cash grants that enabled low-income students to attend the schools of their choice, public or private; the program's scope was extended to religious as well as nonsectarian schools in 1995. School choice, a concept adamantly opposed by most liberals and by the National Education Association, earns high marks in this detailed account of the Milwaukee experiment written by McGroarty, former special assistant to President Bush, deputy director of White House speechwriting and now a Washington communication consultant. Countering the charge that vouchers further harm the disadvantaged and tilt students into segregated schools, he observes that Milwaukee's voucher program has been extremely popular with African American and Hispanic families, and he finds a diversity of cultural viewpoints and ethnic composition in the schools selected by students and their parents. Vouchers, he maintains, offer disadvantaged students alternatives to inferior public schools that the well-to-do have long enjoyed. This study will fuel the debate but, given the intransigence of both sides, is not likely to win many converts. 35,000 first printing; $50,000 ad/promo; first serial to American Spectator.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Prima Lifestyles; 1 edition (April 17, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0761505075
  • ISBN-13: 978-0761505075
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,065,213 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring story of grass roots citizen's victory, March 11, 1999
By A Customer
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This review is from: Break These Chains: The Battle for School Choice (Hardcover)
The flyleaf of the book features the following quote by Polly Williams: "We've got to break these chains before the system turns our children into slaves." If you haven't heard of her, Polly Williams is the African American mother and state legislator in Milwaukee that took on the failing urban public school system and has succeeded in improving the lives of her children, constituents, and maybe all of America. The school district in Milwaukee mandated where kids were allowed to go to school, and many were forced to be bused across town. Many parents applied, appealed, and reapplied to stay in their own neighborhoods, but were refused. Schools in their neighborhoods were poor, but bussing provided no advantage. "They sold us desegragation as a panacea, a placebo," Mikel Holt, the editor of the local newspaper declared. "For fifteen years we've been on a bus ride to nowhere." Daniel McGroarty describes just how bad the situation was--one student secretly took a hidden video camera into the urban school and recorded teachers reading magazines during class, students throwing spit wads, playing dice games and bragging about flunking, among other problems. But he also tells what can be done. Polly Williams wanted her children to attend the private school near to her home, and saw no reason that she shouldn't be able to somehow, even though she could not afford tuition. She formed a parents group, got articles published in the newspaper, began lobbying the legislature, and before she knew it she was arguing before the State legislature as an elected member of that body. She had to battle entrenched groups, supposedly advocates for the disadvantaged, who did everything they could to stop her from succeeding, for their own self-serving reasons. But she managed to join with conservatives and business people who wanted to see her improve education in Milwaukee, and got a limited voucher program started her district. The program started out with a proposal for 3,000 students to attend private schools. I read recently that it has now been expanded for 15,000 students. Scores are up, parents are much happier, and the Milwaukee program promises to be a successful model for choice programs all over the country. If this program can bring substantial improvements, in spite of its limited nature and many restrictions placed on it by the establishment, then there's real hope for solving education problems and lifting people out of poverty. It cannot be done by continually trying the same old reforms in the same old system though, like Grey Davis is trying to do in California. Citizens have to take hold, start having parent's meetings in their basements, and start pressuring legislators. Daniel MacGroarty tells us how Polly Williams and her friends did exactly that. I also recommend "School Choice:Why you Need It, How You Get It", by David Harmer, the author and promoter of Prop 174, the School Choice Initiative in California.
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