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Meier, Deborah – Schools: Studies in Education, 2023
Reflections on the ways in which decisions about the foundation and organization of a small progressive public school exemplify the challenges and trade-offs of living in and with democracy. For the Mission Hill School, democracy was not only an aspiration, it was a way of conducting school life so that every community member felt a sense of…
Descriptors: Democracy, Progressive Education, Public Schools, Educational Development
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Meier, Deborah; Lyne, Heidi; Knoester, Matthew – Schools: Studies in Education, 2023
This article details the demise of a small multicultural and democratic school in a large urban district. After a successful 25-year run, a public school built on principles of progressive and democratic education was dismantled and destroyed. The article attempts to expose the contradictions and untruths in the story of Mission Hill School's…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Public Schools, Democracy, Small Schools
Gasoi, Emily; Meier, Deborah – American Educator, 2018
With the very existence of our system of free, universal education hanging in the balance, there has not been much of a frame of reference for discussing the need to make our schools more democratic. However, in the authors' recent book, "These Schools Belong to You and Me: Why We Can't Afford to Abandon Our Public Schools," they argue…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Investment, Democratic Values, Democracy
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Meier, Deborah – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2011
What's democracy got to do with teaching? To answer this question, the author recollects the personal experiences through which she came to understand the connections between democracy and teaching. Sustaining democracy requires its citizens--teachers, parents, and students, in the case of schooling--to fight for it intelligently. The way teachers…
Descriptors: Teachers, Democracy, Schools of Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Meier, Deborah – Phi Delta Kappan, 2003
Offers five propositions to help schools prepare students to participate equally in a democratic society: Schools need focus; one size does not fit all; a democratic school culture would have lots of human interaction; forms of governance would differ, too; and reform consistent with democracy takes time. Describes how several exemplary schools…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democracy, Elementary Secondary Education, Student Participation
Meier, Deborah – 2000
The lead essay in this collection, "Educating a Democracy" by Deborah Meir, rejects the idea of a centralized authority that dictates how and what teachers teach. Standardization prevents citizens from shaping their own schools, classrooms, and communities. Schools teach democratic virtues and provide much of this teaching by example.…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Centralization, Citizenship Education, Democracy
Meier, Deborah – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
New York City schools who have adopted the Central Park East model share a commitment to kindergarten principles that promote self-reliance and democracy. The central function of schooling should be to cultivate the mental and moral habits that a democratic society requires. These include openness to other views, the capacity to sustain…
Descriptors: Democracy, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education, Kindergarten
Meier, Deborah – American School Board Journal, 2003
Four critical first steps to establish trust among school boards, schools, and the public are: (1) building a community-wide consensus about the essential purposes of schools; (2) agreeing on how to provide choices for minority viewpoints; (3) selecting key education leaders; and (4) providing these leaders with the freedom they need to do the…
Descriptors: Accountability, Boards of Education, Centralization, Citizen Participation