Class War

Class War:The Privatization of Childhood

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What America has at stake when some children go to school hungry and others ride in $1,000 strollers

In an age of austerity, elite corporate education reformers have found new ways to transfer the costs of raising children from the state to individual families. Public schools, tasked with providing education, childcare, job training, meals, and social services to low-income children, struggle with cutbacks. Meanwhile, private schools promise to nurture the minds and personalities of future professionals to the tune of $40,000 a year. As Class War reveals, this situation didnā€™t happen by chance.

In the media, educational success is framed as a consequence of parental choices and natural abilities. In truth the wealthy are ever more able to secure advantages for their children, deepening the rifts between rich and poor. The longer these divisions persist, the worse the consequences.

Drawing on Ericksonā€™s own experience as a teacher in the New York City school system, Class War reveals how modern education has become the real ā€œhunger games,ā€ stealing opportunity and hope from disadvantaged children for the benefit of the well-to-do.

Reviews

  • Informed by her own experiences in the classroom, Erickson shares her outrage over the disparities between the haves and the rest with a clear-eyed analysis. A counterweight to ā€˜reformersā€™ whose anti-union, corporatization of education threatens the very tenets of our democratic society.

    Annette Fuentes, journalist and author of Lockdown High
  • Megan Erickson knows the classroom is not a solvent for class society. But she remembers that it can be about something more than class reproduction. There may be no more trustworthy a guide to schooling in capitalist America than this book.

    Corey Robin, journalist and author of The Reactionary Mind and The History of a Political Idea
  • Cogently written and with a far-ranging, sharp analysis. Anyone who wants to understand the relationship between educational inequality and the privatization of public education should read this book!

    Wayne Au, editor of Rethinking Schools and author of Unequal By Design