Schools, Vouchers, and the American Public

$29.95
by Terry M. Moe

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""Moe's new book is not an argument for or against vouchers; it is an analysis of public opinion on vouchers that is likely to be very influential in shaping the movement's future. Moe has written a nuanced and thoughtful treatise that goes beneath the notoriously unreliable single-shot question favored by the media: Do you favor or oppose school vouchers?"" Richard D. Kahlenberg in The Nation ""In a brilliant, definitive analysis of the subject, Terry Moe tells us who does—and does not—like vouchers as well as who says they will use them, if the opportunity arises. He illuminates not only the school choice debate but the nature of public opinion more generally."" Paul E. Peterson, Harvard University ""No book tells us more about how Americans evaluate schools.... This book will be the starting point for anyone interested in any school reform, not just vouchers. A model analysis of public opinion on a public policy."" —Samuel Popkin, University of California-San Diego ""Finally, a book on school vouchers that explores what ordinary Americans want and believe when thoughtfully engaged on the issue."" —Stephen D. Sugarman, University of California "(response to 5/23/01 Mark Walsh article)" --Terry M. Moe, "Education Week", 6/6/2001 "A thoughtful, leisurely, and dispassionate review of why voucher plans have failed in public opinion and what might yet make them succeed.... This book should be studied carefully by anyone interested in the fate of vouchers." --James Q. Wilson, Pepperdine University, "Commentary", 9/1/2001 "After a half-century of shrill rhetoric around the school choice issue, Terry Moe carefully and powerfully illuminates how parents and ordinary citizens see public education. Building from a rich, unprecedented national survey of American families, this volume is an eye-opener for voucher advocates and public educators alike. " --Bruce Fuller, University of California "Finally, a book on school vouchers that explores what ordinary Americans want and believe when thoughtfully engaged on the issue. Moe's careful analysis demonstrates that vouchers have widest appeal when structured as expanded opportunities for disadvantaged children who are poorly served by today's public schools --a lesson that leaders in the school choice movement must grasp." --Stephen D. Sugarman, University of California "His findings are not only real but also important. We should certainly expect to see the center of the voucher movement shift in future electoral contests." --Melissa J. Marschall, University of Illinois at Chicago, "Journal of Politics", 5/1/2002 "Moe asks the right questions, offers thoughtful, honest, and jargon-free analyses of the answers, and draws conclusions of interest to readers regardless of their position on school vouchers.... This book provides invaluable food for thought to anyone concerned with the politics of education and should be required reading for anyone involved in the battles over school vouchers." --M. Engel, Westfield State College, "Choice", 12/1/2001 "Moe's book is... excellent in all respects." --Peter Woolstencroft, University of Waterloo, "Perspectives on Political Science", 1/1/2003 "Moe's examination of the advantages and disadvantages of legislative and initiative routes to school choice is the first thoughtful analysis of this critical strategic issue.... The voucher movement needs the kind of internal criticism that Moe provide[s]." --Myron Liberman, Bowling Green University, "Public Interest", 4/1/2002 "Moe's new book... is likely to be very influential in shaping the movement's future. Moe has written a nuanced and thoughtful treatise that goes beneath the notoriously unreliable single-shot question favored by the media: Do you favor or oppose school vouchers?" --Richard D. Kahlenberg, Senior Fellow at the Century Foundation, "The Nation", 11/26/2001 "No book tells us more about how Americans evaluate schools. Moe's rigorous scrutiny of public thinking about education is filled with surprising, unanticipated findings about how popular reasoning about education is shaped by attitudes about religion, race, equality, and government. This book will be the starting point for anyone interested in any school reform, not just vouchers. A model analysis of public opinion on a public policy." --Samuel Popkin, University of California-San Diego "Polls have shown that the public supports vouchers, that the public opposes them, and that the public is split almost evenly down the middle. Which poll is to be believed? In a brilliant, definitive analysis of the subject, Terry Moe tells us who does --and does not --like vouchers as well as who says they will use them, if the opportunity arises. He illuminates not only the school choice debate but the nature of public opinion more generally." --Paul E. Peterson, Harvard University "School choice was a child conceived in the sixties by strange bedfellows --urban poverty the mother, market theory the father. In the

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