Hope and Despair in the American City
Why There Are No Bad Schools in Raleigh
Gerald Grant
The book is a must-read for anyone interested in urban planning, race relations and education reform.
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Gerald Grant, a professor of education and sociology at Syracuse University, has written a compelling new book...He compares the troubled school system of Syracuse, N.Y., with its thriving similarly sized counterpart in Raleigh, N.C. The difference is that in Raleigh, in 1976, the Wake County Public School system was created to zone the suburbs and inner city together to ensure a continued healthy mix of social classes.
--Sandra Tsing Loh, New York Times on the Web
The book has the mark of a historian's well-documented journey.
--Tim Simmons, News & Observer
Essential reading not only for his target audience of education reformers but for anyone concerned with the fate of smaller cities...Though few know it, we now live with a grand historical irony: Public schools in the South are far more integrated than most in the North, whose cities, especially the "forgotten" ones, have become ever more doughnutlike. When we consider the failures of busing, we think of the awful mid-'70s wars in Boston...Grant's fine book shows there's another way, one keyed to restoring the educational center of metropolitan-wide economic development, if only we can summon the political will to do it.
--Catherine Tumber, Bookforum
The author blends his personal experiences with wide-ranging interviews and a dash of research to provide a largely sound analysis of the state of urban education.
--Phil Brand, Washington Times
A rare policy book: brief, personal, and flat-out persuasive. Comparing the catastrophically bad school system in Syracuse, where he lives, with the astonishingly successful one in the North Carolina capital, the author quickly alights on a convincing explanation for the disparity.
--Fortune
In this perceptive and important new book, Gerald Grant tells a modern tale of two cities--Syracuse, New York, and Raleigh, North Carolina--that took starkly different approaches to improving schools and communities...What is astounding--and profoundly disturbing--is that education reform at the national level has basically ignored the type of findings so powerfully outlined in Hope and Despair in the American City.
--Richard D. Kashlenberg, Washington Monthly
In Hope and Despair in the American City, Gerald Grant has written a profound book about American cities and their schools. He combines far-ranging scholarship with lively field research, autobiography, historical narrative, and an expert grasp of demographic data and the winding mazes of legal opinion. The result is a big and ambitious portrait, through the story of two cities, of our nation's greatest educational problems and possibilities for school reform in the metropolitan U.S. today.
--Joseph Featherstone, Michigan State University
A penetrating account of two cities and their school systems, one in the Northeast where decline and demographic change have brought difficult problems, and another in the growing South which has turned its socioeconomic challenges into opportunities. Anyone interested in educational reform will have to take account of this valuable analysis of the variable fates of our cities, and their schools.
--Nathan Glazer, Harvard University



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