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Americans Struggling to Learn


Article # : 16526 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1989  1,425 Words
Author : Robert L. Spaeth
Robert L. Spaeth is professor of liberal studies and codirector of the Christian Humanism project at St. John's University, Collegeville, Minnesota. He is coauthor (with R.W. Franklin) of Virgil Michel: American Catholic (Liturgical Press, 1988) and the author of Exhortations on Liberal Education: A Dean Speaks His Mind (St. John's University, 1988); The Church and a Catholic's Conscience (Harper & Row, 1985) and No Easy Answers: Christians Debate Nuclear Arms (Harper and Row, 1983).

       LIVES ON THE BOUNDARY
       The Struggles and Achievements
       of America's Underprepared
       Mike Rose
       New York: The Free Press, 1989
       255 pp., $22.95
       
        Unlike the recent flash flood of books depicting the failures of American education in the 1980s, Mike Rose has written a success story--his personal success at overcoming the odds against acquiring an education and the all-too-limited successes of his students. Rose's story offers no formula, magical or otherwise, for reversing the awful downward spiral of quality in our schools and colleges; but it does show, by personal testimony, what thought, devotion, and effort are required to oppose that trend.
       
        Whether it is the decline of humanistic knowledge, as described by Daine Ravitch and Chester Finn, Jr., in What Do Our 17-Year-Olds Know? or the failure of middle-school education, as recently reported by the Carnegie Foundation, study upon study documents woefully inadequate achievement by students at all levels--in history, literature, geography, mathematics, the sciences, and so forth.
       
        Rose doesn't deny the statistical facts; rather, he asks, Why and how do individual students fail to live up to traditional expectations? What is the significance of their failures and underachievement? In what social context do failures occur? And what is to be done for students categorized by tests and measurements as underachievers or slow or ... (1952 of 8605 Characters)
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