Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education
Since hardly anyone is happy with American schools, it's always open season for school reform—with inevitable calls for better teaching, better curriculums, better organization, etc., etc. In these continuing exhortations, little attention is paid to the role of the students themselves, the object of the "learning process." In this explosive book, Paul Zoch argues that what America most needs to improve its schools is not necessarily better teachers but a wholesale shift in the way it thinks about who or what creates academic success. The tendency to look to teachers for students' achievement, he maintains, is the cause of low performance. Tracing the development of educational ideas in the United States from the time of William James to the present day, Mr. Zoch shows how they have given the schools an obsessive focus on teachers and their teaching methods while neglecting the disciplined effort and hard work that students must expend in order to achieve. Because most students, in accordance with society's prevailing views, see their success as a product of what their teachers do, they devote little effort to their studies and, predictably enough, learn little. Their dedication to schoolwork, as Mr. Zoch demonstrates, falls far short of that routinely displayed by students in other, less prosperous countries. Doomed to Fail is one of the freshest and most compelling investigations of the plight of our schools to appear in many years. It is sure to create a beehive of controversy.
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Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education
Since hardly anyone is happy with American schools, it's always open season for school reform—with inevitable calls for better teaching, better curriculums, better organization, etc., etc. In these continuing exhortations, little attention is paid to the role of the students themselves, the object of the "learning process." In this explosive book, Paul Zoch argues that what America most needs to improve its schools is not necessarily better teachers but a wholesale shift in the way it thinks about who or what creates academic success. The tendency to look to teachers for students' achievement, he maintains, is the cause of low performance. Tracing the development of educational ideas in the United States from the time of William James to the present day, Mr. Zoch shows how they have given the schools an obsessive focus on teachers and their teaching methods while neglecting the disciplined effort and hard work that students must expend in order to achieve. Because most students, in accordance with society's prevailing views, see their success as a product of what their teachers do, they devote little effort to their studies and, predictably enough, learn little. Their dedication to schoolwork, as Mr. Zoch demonstrates, falls far short of that routinely displayed by students in other, less prosperous countries. Doomed to Fail is one of the freshest and most compelling investigations of the plight of our schools to appear in many years. It is sure to create a beehive of controversy.
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Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education

Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education

by Paul A. Zoch
Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education

Doomed to Fail: The Built-in Defects of American Education

by Paul A. Zoch

Hardcover

$26.95 
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Overview

Since hardly anyone is happy with American schools, it's always open season for school reform—with inevitable calls for better teaching, better curriculums, better organization, etc., etc. In these continuing exhortations, little attention is paid to the role of the students themselves, the object of the "learning process." In this explosive book, Paul Zoch argues that what America most needs to improve its schools is not necessarily better teachers but a wholesale shift in the way it thinks about who or what creates academic success. The tendency to look to teachers for students' achievement, he maintains, is the cause of low performance. Tracing the development of educational ideas in the United States from the time of William James to the present day, Mr. Zoch shows how they have given the schools an obsessive focus on teachers and their teaching methods while neglecting the disciplined effort and hard work that students must expend in order to achieve. Because most students, in accordance with society's prevailing views, see their success as a product of what their teachers do, they devote little effort to their studies and, predictably enough, learn little. Their dedication to schoolwork, as Mr. Zoch demonstrates, falls far short of that routinely displayed by students in other, less prosperous countries. Doomed to Fail is one of the freshest and most compelling investigations of the plight of our schools to appear in many years. It is sure to create a beehive of controversy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781566635677
Publisher: Dee, Ivan R. Publisher
Publication date: 05/17/2004
Pages: 260
Product dimensions: 6.32(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.01(d)

About the Author

Paul A. Zoch studied classics at the University of Texas and Indiana University, and has taught high school in Texas for sixteen years. He has participated in—and been subject to—a myriad of school reform initiatives, but he knows firsthand why they fail. He has also written Ancient Rome: An Introductory History. He is married and has a daughter, and lives in Missouri City, Texas.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsv
Preface: Maybe If You'd Sing and Dance, We'd Learn This Stuffix
1William James and Pre-Progressive Educational Thinking3
2The Progressive Paradigm, Part One: Behaviorism and the Individualized Stimulus24
3The Progressive Paradigm, Part Two: The Quest for Social and Individual Integration47
4The Progressive Paradigm, Part Three: The Cult of the Child77
5The Revolving Revolution: Education After Behaviorism108
6Pedagogue-Centric Education: The Omnipotent/Incompetent Teacher, the Irrelevant Student, and the "Textbook Garbage"148
7Where Education Succeeds: The Absence of the Progressive Paradigm in Japan173
8What Is to Be Done?196
Notes203
Index231

What People are Saying About This

R. J. Reynolds

Recommended.
Choice, Eastern Connecticut State University

WILLIAM L. O'NEILL

...One of the most important books on American education ever published....I hope everyone who cares about education reads this book and that it provokes the debate we so desperately need.
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY

DIANE RAVITCH

This is a book that should be read by anyone who cares about realistic school reform.
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

Diane Ravitch

...A stunning critique.... Most of the book is a brilliant recapitulation of the history of American education... Engaging.
Education Next

GERALD GRAFF

...Arguing in a rigorous and intellectually serious way...Zoch...does much to restore student-centered education to the respectability it deserves.
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO

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