Thomas B. Fordham Institute - Advancing Educational Excellence

Sweating the Small Stuff: Inner-City Schools and the New Paternalism

August 15, 2008

by David Whitman

The most exciting innovation in education policy in the last decade is the emergence of highly effective schools in our nation’s inner cities, schools where disadvantaged teens make enormous gains in academic achievement. In this book, David Whitman takes readers inside six of these secondary schools and reveals the secret to their success: they are paternalistic.

The schools teach teens how to act according to traditional, middle-class values, set and enforce exacting academic standards, and closely supervise student behavior. But unlike paternalistic institutions of the past, these schools are warm, caring places, where teachers and principals form paternal-like bonds with students. Though little explored to date, the new paternalistic schools are the most promising means yet for closing the nation's costly and shameful achievement gap.

Click here to purchase Sweating the Small Stuff at Amazon.com.

(For review copies, please contact Mickey Muldoon.)

 

Other materials


Gadfly editorial on the book

Excerpt of the book from Education Next

George Will writes about American Indian Public Charter School

George Will writes about Cristo Rey Jesuit High School

David Brooks mentions the book

Press release

Fordham held a book talk for "Sweating the Small Stuff" on September 3, 2008. Watch the video here.


"Sweating the Small Stuff: Inner-City Schools and the New Paternalism" book talk from Education Gadfly on Vimeo.

Excerpt of David Whitman's comments at book talk for "Sweating the Small Stuff: Inner City Schools and the New Paternalism," September 3, 2008

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