American Decades
Kozol, Jonathan 1936-
TEACHER AND EDUCATION CRITIC
"Unbounded and Compensatory Rage."
Jonathan Kozol, the son of a physician in the Boston suburbs, grew up in a "privileged and insulated" world. He came into contact with the less fortunate only on trips to drive his live in maid home to Roxbury, the black section of Boston, on her day off. Years later he realized "with a wave of shame and fear" that the maid's children, brought up by their grandmother, "had been denied the childhood and happiness and care" that had been given to him by their mother. He began teaching at an elementary school in the Roxbury area in 1964, fresh from studying at Harvard and Oxford and living in Paris. In teaching fourth grade he found "a world of suffering, of hopelessness and fear." His shame turned into, as he puts it, "unbounded and compensatory rage," which propelled Kozol toward a career in writing about ghetto schools, illiteracy, and the effects on children of...
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1970's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Politics and Funding During the Nixon-Carter Years
- Federal Education Legislation for the Handicapped
- Federal and State Bilingual Education Policy
- Busing to Achieve Desegregation
- The Literacy Crisis
- Textbooks Under Fire
- Religious Schooling During the 1970s
- Open-Admissions Policies in Higher Education
- Minority-Admissions Policies: Before and After Bakke
- Progress for Women in Education
- Teacher Organizations and Politics in the 1970s
- Black Educational Issues of the 1970s
- Vocational and Community Colleges
- The Effects of 1960s Activism on the 1970s
- The Open Classroom, Open Schooling, and Informal Learning
- Curricular Innovations: Stepping Forward, Then Stepping Back
- School-Financing Decisions from the Courts
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1970–1979
