Using American schools as a reference point, this book provides a
comprehensive, comparative description of schooling as a global
institution. Each chapter develops a story about a particular global
trend: continuing gender differences in achievement, new methods nations
employ to govern their schools, the rapidly increasing use of private
tutoring, school violence, the development of effective curriculums, and
the everyday work of teachers, among other topics.
The authors draw on a four-year investigation conducted in forty-seven
countries that examined many aspects of K-12 schooling, such as how
schools are run, what teachers teach, and what students learn in
mathematics and science. Baker and LeTendre present the results of the
study in a non-technical and accessible fashion, outlining the
implications of current trends for both education policy discussions and
theoretical explorations of the role of education in society. Running
throughout the book is a discussion of how world educational trends and
the forces behind them will work to change and shape the possible
directions education may take in the future.