Rutter: Fifteen Thousand Hours: Secondary School S & Their Effects on Children (Cloth): Secondary Schools and Their Effects on Children pdf epub fb2

Rutter: Fifteen Thousand Hours: Secondary School S & Their Effects on Children (Cloth): Secondary Schools and Their Effects on Children by - pdf epub fb2

Rutter: Fifteen Thousand Hours: Secondary School S & Their Effects on Children (Cloth): Secondary Schools and Their Effects on Children Author: -
Title: Rutter: Fifteen Thousand Hours: Secondary School S & Their Effects on Children (Cloth): Secondary Schools and Their Effects on Children
ISBN: 0674300254
ISBN13: 978-0674300255
Other Formats: lit lrf txt mbr
Pages: 294 pages
Publisher: Harvard University Press; Pencil Underlining edition (July 1, 1979)
Language: English
Category: Other
Size PDF version: 1818 kb
Size EPUB version: 1592 kb
Subcategory: Education




Can a good school help its students overcome the adverse effects of economic disadvantage and family adversity? Recent educational assessment suggests that the answer may be a painful no. Here, however, is a book that contradicts the prevailing pessimism about the possibilities of education. In Fifteen Thousand Hours, Michael Rutter and his colleagues show conclusively that schools can make a difference.

In a three-year study of a dozen secondary schools in a large urban area, Rutter's team found that some schools were demonstrably better than others at promoting the academic and social success of their students. Moreover, there were clear and interesting differences between the schools that promote success and the schools that promote failure. As Rutter shows, these differences provide important clues to the kind of educational reform that might allow inner-city schools to act more uniformly as a positive and protective influence on students who must grow up in an otherwise disordered and difficult world.

For a dozen years during their formative period of development, children spend as many of their working hours at school as at home―some 15,000 hours in all. To suggest that this tremendous amount of time has no effect on development seems irrational. To settle for schools that simply act as institutions of containment for disadvantaged children seems a strategy of despair. The importance of this major book in education is its clear demonstration that these are not the only alternatives.