Improving the quality of public schooling in America has been a
consuming issue for over two decades, but improving the education of
poor students and particularly non-white students has been at the center
of this issue as long as it has existed. After trying educational
vouchers, charter schools, increased testing, school uniforms, and
decentralized decision-making, some administrators are concluding that
changing schools is not the answer. This is the line of reasoning behind
Sampson's study of 12 poor black families in a Chicago suburb, which
showed that despite consistencies in race, income, and neighborhood,
student performance varied across the board. The author concludes that
the difference is found in homes where values such as discipline, order,
structure, responsibility, and preparing for the future were emphasized.
This book focuses on the potential of the family to do what generations
of reform could not and should appeal to anyone involved with public
policy, racial, or social issues.