• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Dividing the Public : School Finance and the Creation of Structural Inequity
  • Contains: Frontmatter
    Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction: Narratives of State Innocence and the History of School Finance
    1. Funding for Education, Settler Colonialism, and the "California Experiment" in Common School Centralization, 1848-1865
    2. Buying and Selling Schools and Racializing Space in a Western State
    3. Finance Reform and the Contested Meaning of "Public" in the 1870s and 1880s
    4. State-Sponsored Inequalities, Boosterism, and the Race for Progressive Era School Reform, 1890-1910
    5. The Rise of the District Property Tax, Educational Expertise, and Rationalized Inequality, 1910-1928
    6. The Art of Addressing Inequality While Expanding It, 1928-1950
    Epilogue: Inequity Triumphant
    Appendix: School Finance Data
    Notes
    Index
  • Contributor: Kelly, Matthew Gardner [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, [2024]
  • Published in: Histories of American Education
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (270 p.); 7 maps, 1 chart, 1 graph
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1515/9781501773273
  • ISBN: 9781501773273
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: EDUCATION / Finance ; education funding, financial inequality, local property tax, schooling resource disparities, tax in districts, educational policy, finance history
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: In English
  • Description: In Dividing the Public, Matthew Gardner Kelly takes aim at the racial and economic disparities that characterize public education funding in the United States. With California as his focus, Kelly illustrates that the use of local taxes to fund public education was never an inadvertent or de facto product of past practices, but an intentional decision adopted in place of well-known alternatives during the Progressive Era, against past precedent and principle in several states.From efforts to convert expropriated Indigenous and Mexican land into common school funding in the 1850s, to reforms that directed state aid to expanding white suburbs during the years surrounding World War II, Dividing the Public traces, in intricate detail, how a host of policies connected to school funding have divided California by race and class over time. In bringing into view the neglected and poorly understood history of policymaking connected to school finance, Kelly offers a new story about the role public education played in shaping the racially segregated, economically divided, and politically fragmented world of the post-1945 metropolis
  • Access State: Open Access
  • Rights information: Attribution - Non Commercial - No Derivs (CC BY-NC-ND)