Curriculum theory has long acknowledged the presence of a hidden curriculum in schools. Whereas the formal curriculum is explicit and documented, the hidden curriculum involves those attitudes, experiences, and learnings that are largely implicit and unintended. This article compares the hidden civic lessons found in public and private schools. Catholic and other private schools have measurable organizational strengths that socialize students into participation in public institutions more effectively than public schools
In the past fifty years, the share of students enrolled in U.S. Catholic schools has declined from a...
Throughout the 20th century, community-owned and operated public schooling was viewed in the United ...
There is little doubt of public school’s role in the enculturation of youth into American democracy....
Curriculum theory has long acknowledged the presence of a hidden curriculum in schools. Whereas the ...
Curriculum theory has long acknowledged the presence of a hidden cur-riculum in schools. Whereas the...
Private Schools make an undeniable contribution to the public good. Nevertheless, many critics argue...
Common wisdom and public discourse seem to suggest that there are two types of schools, private and ...
In the early Republic, no simple distinction between public and private schools existed. With the a...
Since the inception of public schools, curriculum has been a source of ongoing debate and disagreeme...
Five principles underlie the changing policy architecture of American K-12 education. The author dis...
In the late 1940s and 1950s American Catholic educators faced the dilemma of how to transmit Catholi...
Recent US Supreme Court cases signal a likely increase in calls for K-12 school choice programs that...
This article demonstrates that there is virtual unanimity among America’s educational leaders in the...
Originally cast against the backdrop of the pan-Protestant public school, the manuscript follows Cat...
America’s public schools have not been exempt from the movement to privatization and contracting out...
In the past fifty years, the share of students enrolled in U.S. Catholic schools has declined from a...
Throughout the 20th century, community-owned and operated public schooling was viewed in the United ...
There is little doubt of public school’s role in the enculturation of youth into American democracy....
Curriculum theory has long acknowledged the presence of a hidden curriculum in schools. Whereas the ...
Curriculum theory has long acknowledged the presence of a hidden cur-riculum in schools. Whereas the...
Private Schools make an undeniable contribution to the public good. Nevertheless, many critics argue...
Common wisdom and public discourse seem to suggest that there are two types of schools, private and ...
In the early Republic, no simple distinction between public and private schools existed. With the a...
Since the inception of public schools, curriculum has been a source of ongoing debate and disagreeme...
Five principles underlie the changing policy architecture of American K-12 education. The author dis...
In the late 1940s and 1950s American Catholic educators faced the dilemma of how to transmit Catholi...
Recent US Supreme Court cases signal a likely increase in calls for K-12 school choice programs that...
This article demonstrates that there is virtual unanimity among America’s educational leaders in the...
Originally cast against the backdrop of the pan-Protestant public school, the manuscript follows Cat...
America’s public schools have not been exempt from the movement to privatization and contracting out...
In the past fifty years, the share of students enrolled in U.S. Catholic schools has declined from a...
Throughout the 20th century, community-owned and operated public schooling was viewed in the United ...
There is little doubt of public school’s role in the enculturation of youth into American democracy....