Only in New Orleans

School Choice and Equity Post-Hurricane Katrina

Series: 

With 2015 marking the 10th commemoration of Hurricane Katrina, education reform in New Orleans continues to garner substantial local, national, and international attention. Advocates and critics alike have continued to cite test scores, new school providers, and different theories of governance in making multiple arguments for and against how contemporary education policy is shaping public education and its role in the rebuilding of the city.
Rather than trying to provide a single, unified account of education reform in New Orleans, the chapters in this volume provide multiple ways of approaching some of the most significant questions around school choice and educational equity that have arisen in the years since Katrina.
This collection of research articles, essays, and journalistic accounts of education reform in New Orleans collectively argues that the extreme makeover of the city’s public schools toward a new market-based model was shaped by many local, historically specific conditions. In consequence, while the city’s schools have been both heralded as a model for other cities and derided as a lesson in the limits of market-based reform, the experience of education reform that has taken place in the city—and its impacts on the lives of students, families, and educators—could have happened only in New Orleans.

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Up to Higher Ground
School Choice and the Promises of Democracy Post-2005
Pages: 1–15
Education and the Public Sphere in New Orleans, 1803–2005
Conflicts over Public Education, Racial Inequality, and Social Status in Pre-Katrina New Orleans
Pages: 17–35
The New Iconography of the Global City
Displacement and the Residues of Culture in Chicago
Pages: 53–67
Re-Forming the Post-Political City?
Public School Reform and Democratic Practice in Post-Katrina New Orleans
Pages: 87–102
Education Reform in New Orleans
Voices from the Recovery School District
Pages: 103–108
Market-Based Pedagogies
Assessment, Instruction, and Purpose at a “No Excuses” Charter School
Pages: 109–128
Principles of Leading Change
An Inductive Analysis from Post-Katrina New Orleans
Pages: 149–172
Katrina at 10 and Counting
New Orleans’ Public Schools
Pages: 173–189
A Missed Opportunity in Louisiana School Reform
Site Visitation as Diagnostic Tool for School Improvement
Pages: 191–221
Nola Aftershock
The Consequences of Disaster Capitalism
Pages: 223–236
Gaining “Choice” and Losing Voice
Is the New Orleans Charter School Takeover a Case of the Emperor’s New Clothes?
Pages: 237–265
The Looting of the American Dream
The Post-Katrina Rubble of Public Education in Louisiana
Pages: 277–284
Educational Researchers and their students
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