The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America
by Jonathan KozolSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
discuss this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
Where's the love? Add this book to your favorite list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 982)
bookshelves:
education
There seems to be a tiny bit of backlash against Kozol swimming out there, including a really snotty article from someone I really admire usually (Sandra Tsing Loh). So I have to put my two cents in. I have seen with my own eyes the conditions he describes, so to anyone who "poo poohs" these deplorable physical conditions is living in lala land. Secondly, Tsing Loh actually disproves her own point. It's very nice that she has the tiiiiime, energy, education, internet connections, media...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
2 comments
Read in December, 2006
Given the amount of Kozol's work that I have read, I'm going to just write 1 review (for now). His works on poverty, homelessness, and adult illiteracy are also worth reading, but I am most impressed by his books on the absolutely atrocious state of American education. If you are going to choose just one of his books, I would suggest this one (his most recent indictment of racism and classism in our public schools) or Savage Inequalities (a scathing report on public school systems across the c...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in October, 2007
This book had been on my list forever. While I think Kozol is an amazing story teller (very graphic, visual and detailed), I found I couldn't even finish this book. The points he was making about our completely dysfunctional educational system rang very true but I found myself getting so depressed. I kept waiting and waiting and waiting for him to get to some discussion of solutions. After more than 200 pages of just more of the same, I just gave up : (
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
education
Read in October, 2008
I usually like Kozol's works, but this one I had to drop after a while and scan. Kozol as always brings to life the situation of neglected schools and children in this country. And as he is also good at conveying a sense of outrage at how this nation simply chooses to abandon a large group of their own children. However, this particular book is extremely depressing. As an educator, I just found myself wondering if there was any hope at all. I mean, we can document the atrocity of separating chil...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Amazing! This is seriously a must-read for everyone. It is staggering to see what is really happening in our urban school systems.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
6 comments
Read in September, 2008
There are moments of true horror described in the pages of this book. Kozol writes in a concise manner and tends to steer clear of injecting strong emotion into what he reports. However it is impossible not to be moved and angered by the reality of the public education system in this country. How anyone can think it's ok to start grooming kindergarten children for 'managerial' positions, steering children from minority backgrounds into trades where they will be 'useful' instead of allowing them ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
race-ethnic-studies,
teaching
Read in March, 2008
In overwhelming and painful detail Jonathan Kozol shows how we have returned to segregated education in the United States. Whereas Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education was designed to eradicate segregated schools, through residential segregation, creative school district lining, and inequitable school funding policies, we have a more segregated system today than before the landmark 1954 Supreme Court decisison. He interviews children, teachers, administrators, and scholars & visits schools ac...more
Like this review?
yes
1 comments
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
the PTA, education advocates, policy makers
This book provides a strong description of the disparity between wealthy suburbs and impoverished inner-city (read: black) schooling practices. While Kozol explains the conditions existing within schools he has visited on either end of this spectrum he glosses over the gray areas, oases of uplifting education that might be found within the wonderful mix of cultures of metropolises.
Goodreads is wonderful! The rhetoric in this book is so powerful that it may encourage one to think: what ...more
Goodreads is wonderful! The rhetoric in this book is so powerful that it may encourage one to think: what ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
adult-books,
teacher-resources
Read in March, 2008
Kozol is a powerhouse when it comes to advocating for equity in public education. I remember, while a junior in college, reading Savage Inequalities, his searing indictment of the condition of schools and education in impoverished communities, and feeling reaffirmed in my desire to teach in underprivileged neighborhoods.
Now, as I enter my 8th year of teaching, I find The Shame of the Nation just as powerful. Kozol’s frank writing style that combines statistics and hard facts with observa...more
Now, as I enter my 8th year of teaching, I find The Shame of the Nation just as powerful. Kozol’s frank writing style that combines statistics and hard facts with observa...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2007
More of a "school" type book...but Jonathan Kozol is one of my favorite authors and he's not "officially" a sociologist", more like a journalist. He writes well, directly, and he has a way of capturing his interaction with school age children (elementary to high school) in a way that makes your heart hurt. (at least mine did).
Kozol was originally a teacher in downtown Boston right after the Brown v. Board of education decision was rendered ending legalized school se...more
Kozol was originally a teacher in downtown Boston right after the Brown v. Board of education decision was rendered ending legalized school se...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
audio-books
Read in October, 2008
Well, that was depressing! The nations inner-city schools are not only low achieving, but segregated, too. Kozol lets us know that this is a failure on the part of many people, but he reserves special blame for politicians who are unwilling to desegregate the schools and are unwilling to fund innercity black and hispanic schools at the same level as they fund suburban white schools.
Kozol makes a passionate argument, but I'm not entirely convinced. The DC schools, for example, spend more ...more
Kozol makes a passionate argument, but I'm not entirely convinced. The DC schools, for example, spend more ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
teacher-books
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in August, 2007
If we lived in any kind of a sane, just world, George W. Bush would have been pelted with hardback copies of this thing as he swaggered into the Martin Luther King Charter School in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans on the second anniversary of Katrina yesterday, where he talked a bunch of crap about how much he cares and whatever and then "took the opportunity to extol his belief in competition and choice in public school." http://www.nytimes.com/aponlin...
I r...more
I r...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
educators
Wow. This book is a pretty searing indictment of the public education system in the US. And rightly so - Kozol succinctly outlines many of the inequalities currently present in our schools, and makes a case for why segregation is back in a big way and why we must do something to change it. I've observed much of what he covers firsthand in my visits to high schools around the country over the past ten years, but haven't had the bird's eye view to truly understand what's systemic and incredibly...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
currently-reading,
general-teaching-resources
This book is definitely making me angry about what is happening in our urban school districts. Really the message I'm getting from Kozol is that we're turning our "low-performing" schools into businesses aimed at churning out higher test scores, yet the scores keep remaining low. I keep asking myself when will administrators and curriculum writers wake up and realize that taking freedoms away from children and doing test prep 24/7 doesn't achieve results. What makes the middle-class/hi...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in November, 2006
An excellent book on the conditions of our public schools as concerns the growing education gap between whites and everyone else, and how approaches to education in different schools emphasize this difference. Is there an agenda in this book that is meant to move us and make us angry? Yes. Is it still important to read? Yes. Kozol has been working with public schools for decades, and his observations are fascinating, such as the way schools in New York have adapted curricula that schedule o...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
If you have read any Kozol book the are pretty similar. He talks about poverty, institutional racism, and the inequalities between rich and poor schools in our nation. I like that he tells stories for the reader to connect emotionally, but then backs his words up with stats.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
educators interested in social justice issues
The title gives you a good idea of what this book is about. I didn't give this book the time it deserved (it was a library book that I couldn't renew). Kozol does a nice job of varying the aggregate level of study: providing general statistics and then also including a lot of personal accounts of the educational experience (grade school and high school) from the viewpoints of students, teachers, and administrators to paint a picture of the U.S. education system. Though a lot of it is frustrating...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2008
This book needs to be read by anyone who is interested in teaching or ever having children. Kozol addresses head on the problem with race and our public school system.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
socialscience
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone
I think Jonathan Kozol is one of the best nonfiction writers out there. I've read nearly all his books, including this one about racial segregation in American schools. Our education system is a topic he has covered brilliantly in previous books -- "Savage Inequalities" and "Death at an Early Age" -- both excellent, and I highly recommend reading them. Following his typical style, he pulls in lots of published facts on the topic, but places this in context by spending a gr...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2008
I often had strong reactions to Kozal's allegations regarding segregation and a failing educational system. My "middle class American" perspective was often challenged as I reflected on his allegations. Many examples which make me angry as an educator and frustrated as an American. Although he had a clear bias, he had a point. We should really invest in our public schools because everyone benefits when we do and everyone loses when we don't.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
























