Dr. Glen Earthman’s Planning Educational Facilities, an already excellent text, has just been made even or pertinent to the administrator, planner, architect, and school board member. Earthman is a world-renowned researcher and educator, who has knowledge, practical experience, and vision for essential information and practice for the places where students learn. This is a “must read” for anyone who is or plans to be working with school planning and facilities.
Dr. Earthman’s book, Planning Educational Facilities, represents a classic example of excellence in school facility publications. With his distinguished scholarship and practical experience, Dr. Earthman leads readers in a step-by-step approach to educational facility planning. Dr. Earthman discusses educational facility issues based on the perspectives of school board members, school superintendents, school district and site administrators. Concerns of the designers, the contractors, and the occupants are also significantly addressed. This book particularly stresses the sustainability of school buildings and their life expectancy. School building maintenance, operation, and safety are the special concerns Earthman emphasizes in the planning process. Planning Educational Facilities is a book school administrators involved in facility planning must read.
Glen I. Earthman’s Planning Educational Facilities: What Educators Need to Know, 4e is a book that presents a systematic approach to the processes of planning for school buildings. From the initial demographic work of expressing a need for facilities to the evaluation of the final product, the book has discussions on each process in detail that every educator can understand. The inextricable link between facility planning and long-range educational planning in the school system is emphasized throughout the planning processes, where comprehensive descriptions of the planning processes are presented in clear and explicit terms. The book also contains very practical problem-based learning exercises that reinforce the planning concepts expressed in the narrative. One highlight of special interest is the section on planning for safe school buildings. A case study is included with this topic. Overall this book may be classified as a user-friendly addition to school facilities planning literature. I highly recommend this excellent work.
Glen I. Earthman’s Planning Educational Facilities has been a fundamental text in our superintendency program of study for over a decade at the University of Arkansas, and this new 2013 version will certainly be utilized. A new chapter titled ‘Problem-Based Learning’ provides students with thought-provoking considerations on realistic concerns that will be faced by an educational leader. Included work exercises and case studies allow students to make and justify decisions and support real-world requirements. This is a book that all educational leadership programs need to be utilizing.
Dr. Glen Earthman’s book, Planning Educational Facilities, represents a classic example of excellence in school facility publications. With his distinguished scholarship and practical experiences, Dr. Earthman leads the readers in a step-by-step approach to educational facility planning. Dr. Earthman discusses educational facility issues based on the perspectives of school board members, school superintendents and school district and site administrators. Concerns of the designers, the contractors and the occupants are also significantly addressed. The book particularly stressed on the sustainability of school buildings in their life expectancies. School building maintenance, operation, and safety are the special concerns the author emphasized in the planning process. Planning Educational Facilities is a book school administrators involved in facility planning must read.
Glen Earthman speaks directly to educational administrators, explaining the educational facility planning process in clear and concise terms. His thorough and comprehensive description provides school leaders a valuable set of tools for meeting their obligations in ushering through school building projects. Readers benefit from Earthman’s future-focused view of school facility planning, including honest discussion of the economic, social, political, legal, and environmental challenges facing 21st century educational leaders. Earthman challenges educators to engage confidently and creatively, utilizing the events of school design and construction as a means for furthering student learning and advancing overall educational goals.
Earthman's textbook is one of those rare contributions to the study of educational leadership that transcends classroom instruction. The textbook offers a unique balance between the theoretical and practical knowledge necessary to effectively plan, fund, oversee, and evaluate school construction projects. Students and scholars alike will find the book a concise guide in their study of educational facilities and an invaluable resource throughout their careers. I find my job of developing educational leaders easier since I have Earthman's textbook on my bookshelf.
Glen Earthman speaks directly to educational administrators, explaining the educational facility planning process in clear and concise terms. His thorough and comprehensive description provides school leaders a valuable set of tools for meeting their obligations in ushering through school building projects. Earthman challenges educators to engage confidently and creatively, utilizing the events of school construction as a means for furthering student learning and advancing overall educational goals.
Earthman's Planning Educational Facilities has been a fundamental text in our superintendency program of study for over a decade at the University of Arkansas, and this new 2009 version will certainly be utilized. A new chapter entitled "Problem-Based Learning" provides students with thought provoking considerations on realistic concerns that will be faced as an educational leader. Included work exercises and case studies allow students to make and justify decisions and support real-world requirements. This is a textbook that all educational leadership programs need to be utilizing.
Earthman's textbook is one of those rare contributions to the study of educational leadership that transcends classroom instruction. The textbook offers a unique balance between the theoretical and practical knowledge necessary to effectively plan, fund, oversee, and evaluate school construction projects. Students and scholars alike will find the book a concise guide in their study of educational facilities and an invaluable resource throughout their careers. I find my job of developing educational leaders easier since I have Earthman's textbook on my bookshelf.