American education is in crisis. Although reform advocates have repeated this obvious truth for several decades, their proposed remedies have varied widely, indicating their wide disagreements concerning both the causes and the cures. In this book, York presents some of these past and present ideas for reform and suggests a primary reason for the failure of their acceptance: potential reformers have focused too little on American societal values. He argues in a penetrating and persuasive manner the importance of those values in setting the foundational goals that education should seek to attain, and which the public must be willing to embrace. His own suggestions, at once pragmatic and progressive, suggest the need for a fresh start, rather than a revolution.
