The full-scale assault on public education threatens not just public
education but American democracy itself.
Public education as we know it is in trouble. Derek W. Black, a legal
scholar and tenacious advocate, shows how major democratic and
constitutional developments are intimately linked to the expansion of
public education throughout American history. Schoolhouse Burningis
grounded in pathbreaking, original research into how the nation, in its
infancy, built itself around public education and, following the Civil
War, enshrined education as a constitutional right that forever changed
the trajectory of our democracy. Public education, alongside the right
to vote, was the cornerstone of the recovery of the war-torn nation.
Today's current schooling trends -- the declining commitment to properly
fund public education and the well-financed political agenda to expand
vouchers and charter schools -- present a major assault on the
democratic norms that public education represents and risk undermining
one of the unique accomplishments of American society.