What Makes a Good School?

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title What Makes a Good School?
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Jane Caro
By (author) Chris Bonnor
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 135
ISBN/Barcode 9781742233291
ClassificationsDewey:371
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher NewSouth Publishing
Imprint NewSouth Publishing
Publication Date 1 July 2012
Publication Country Australia

Description

How much of what you hear about schools can you trust? Can you believe the marketing hype about unsurpassed facilities, genius teachers and stellar academic achievement? Do you listen to neighbourhood gossip about your local school? Are government statistics the answer? School choice has become one of the most agonising issues of parenthood. Chris Bonnor and Jane Caro have no magic formula, and agree that complex factors come together to make a good school. But drawing on their own experiences and knowledge as school principal, parents and advocates they give parents the tools to do homework about schools themselves. They compare talk about schools - public, Catholic, private, selective, comprehensive - against the reality. They examine how good schools respond to the recurring crises in the lives of kids. They help navigate NAPLAN tests and the My School website. And they place their analysis squarely in the middle of the national discussion about education. Schools have to be good for students, for parents and for the nation. What Makes a Good School? will help you to cover all bases.

Author Biography

Chris Bonnor is a contributing author with the Centre for Policy Development on "More Than Luck: Ideas Australia Needs Now." He is also a former high school principal and a former president of the New South Wales Secondary Principals Council. Jane Caro is a social commentator, a columnist, a workshop facilitator, a broadcaster, and an award-winning advertising writer. She is the founder of a communications consultancy and she lectures in advertising at the University of Western Sydney. She is also the coauthor of "The F Word" and, with Chris Bonnor, the coauthor of "The Stupid Country."