DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:
Usually ships within 24 hours
Delivery Time and Shipping Rates
Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Paperback - Reprint)
In this text for educators and concerned citizens, educational historian Ravitch reveals how interest groups on the left and right of the political spectrum have pressured publishers to self-censor texts for use in the classroom. She contends that the removal of potentially controversial words and passages compromises the educational value of these texts. As an alternative, she suggests explaining to students that sometimes history hasn't been very nice while still allowing historical actors to speak for themselves. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
In The Language Police, Ms. Ravitch -- a historian of education at New York University and the author of Left Back, a 2000 book about failed school reform -- provides an impassioned examination of how right-wing and left-wing pressure groups have succeeded in sanitizing textbooks and tests, how educational publishers have conspired in this censorship, and how this development over the last three decades is eviscerating the teaching of literature and history. — Michiku Kakutani
More Reviews and RecommendationsDiane Ravitch is a historian of education and Research Professor of Education at New York University and Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. She was assistant secretary in charge of research in the U.S. Department of Education in the administration of President George H. W. Bush and was appointed to the National Assessment Governing Board by President Bill Clinton. The author of seven previous books on education, including the critically acclaimed Left Back: A Century of Battles Over School Reform, she lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 19, 2007: In The Language Police, Diane Ravitch writes about a quiet war that has been going on almost unnoticed within the United States since Mark Twain had his book i Huckleberry Finn /i published in 1885. It is the war over exactly what America?s youth will be exposed to and learns from in our school?s textbooks and other required readings. What started out as a justified battle to remove intentional biased content against African Americans and women has turned into an absolutely unreasonable fight that has removed great literature and true history from a students learning, only to replace it with dull, uninspiring, but politically correct and unoffending writings. When Huckleberry Finn was published, it immediately drew objectionable reviews from many different groups around the nation. It was called racist, sexist, and immoral. At one point in time even a school named after Mark Twain called it ?racist trash.? Then in the 1950?s right winged groups removed loads of literature that they said sympathized with or supported communist and socialist viewpoints. Since then, The Language Police (Pressure groups such as Christian fundamentalists and Feminists) have become even more picky with what they deem allowable for students to read. Diane Ravitch believes that this pressure has taken away literature that enhances imagination, removed thought provoking articles and books, and has even distorted our view of our own history while destroying our cultural heritage. How do these groups keep certain literature out of the schools? They have learned that even a simple protest against a textbook or other writing will kill the sales of that piece of work. Publishing companies, in fear of going broke, are willing to comply with all parties standards in order to sell their book to a state?s educational system. If large states such as California or Texas approve the writing to be used in the schools, the publishing company will prosper. If the states do not approve the writings, the publisher will lose millions of dollars that they invested into creating their literature. How do we stop these pressure groups from removing important literature from our schools? First, the average American needs to know about the censorship of their children?s learning material. Publishing companies need to show their standards so people can see just what they are throwing out of circulation and why. Once there is enough public support the system of states adopting books for their entire educational system can be overruled. This will allow smaller publishing companies to compete with larger ones for individual school districts. It will also place more of the power in the teachers? hands. As experts in their subjects, they themselves can choose what books are truly accurate and uncensored. This competition will force publishers to abandon their anti-bias codes and allow students to read the information that they have a right to see. The Language Police gives many interesting, yet disturbing, examples of how we have lost prime literature in our schools. It is truly a war and I can not understand how I was not aware of it?s happenings before I read this book. The fight against censorship is a truly worthy cause that more people should know exists. This book will keep you interested while giving you the plain facts about a negative revolution in education that has been occurring for over a hundred years. If our ignorance continues, as...
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
February 25, 2007: Ravitch may have a good point, but she needs to learn to organize her work. Much of her information, while initially compelling, is extremely repetitive. Unfortunately, her argument loses credibility the more she rants.
Before Anton Chekhov and Mark Twain can be used in school readers and exams, they must be vetted by a bias and sensitivity committee. An anthology used in Tennessee schools changed “By God!” to “By gum!” and “My God!” to “You don’t mean it.” The New York State Education Department omitted mentioning Jews in an Isaac Bashevis Singer story about prewar Poland, or blacks in Annie Dillard’s memoir of growing up in a racially mixed town. California rejected a reading book because The Little Engine That Could was male.
Diane Ravitch maintains that America’s students are compelled to read insipid texts that have been censored and bowdlerized, issued by publishers who willingly cut controversial material from their books—a case of the bland leading the bland.
The Language Police is the first full-scale exposé of this cultural and educational scandal, written by a leading historian. It documents the existence of an elaborate and well-established protocol of beneficent censorship, quietly endorsed and implemented by test makers and textbook publishers, states, and the federal government. School boards and bias and sensitivity committees review, abridge, and modify texts to delete potentially offensive words, topics, and imagery. Publishers practice self-censorship to sell books in big states.
To what exactly do the censors object? A typical publisher’s guideline advises that
• Women cannot be depicted as caregivers or doing
household chores.
• Men cannot be lawyers or doctors or plumbers.
They must be nurturing helpmates.
• Old people cannot befeeble or dependent; they
must jog or repair the roof.
• A story that is set in the mountains discriminates
against students from flatlands.
• Children cannot be shown as disobedient or in
conflict with adults.
• Cake cannot appear in a story because it is not
nutritious.
The result of these revisions are—no surprise!—boring, inane texts about a cotton-candy world bearing no resemblance to what children can access with the click of a remote control or a computer mouse. Sadly, data show that these efforts to sanitize language do not advance learning or bolster test scores, the very
reason given for banning allegedly insensitive words and topics.
Ravitch offers a powerful political and economic analysis of the causes of censorship. She has practical and sensible solutions for ending it, which will improve the quality of books for students as well as liberating publishers, state boards of education, and schools from the grip of pressure groups.
Passionate and polemical, The Language Police is a book for every educator, concerned parent, and engaged citizen.
In The Language Police, Ms. Ravitch -- a historian of education at New York University and the author of Left Back, a 2000 book about failed school reform -- provides an impassioned examination of how right-wing and left-wing pressure groups have succeeded in sanitizing textbooks and tests, how educational publishers have conspired in this censorship, and how this development over the last three decades is eviscerating the teaching of literature and history. — Michiku Kakutani
Lucid, forceful, written with insight, passion, compassion and conviction, The Language Police is not only hair-raisingly readable but deeply reasonable. It should be required reading not only for parents, teachers and educators, but for everyone who cares about history, literature, science, culture and indeed the civilization in which we live. — Merle Rubin
It's difficult to exaggerate the importance of this book. Whether The Language Police will turn out to be one of those rare books that actually influence the way we live -- Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, Ralph Nader's Unsafe at Any Speed -- remains to be seen, but surely one must pray that it does. Meticulously researched and forcefully argued, it makes appallingly plain that the textbooks American schoolchildren read and the tests that measure their academic progress have been corrupted by a bizarre de facto alliance of the far left and the far right. — Jonathan Yardley
Ravitch, finding the system and its results ''an outrage,'' passionately insists that ''the reign of censorship must end.'' Her remedies, along with better-educated teachers: Eliminate the statewide textbooks adoption process, and substitute a competitive market, with school districts choosing their own books and materials. And let the sun shine in by compelling all states and publishers to reveal their bias guidelines and by placing on the Internet all the deliberations of bias and sensitivity panels, including what they reject. ''No one asked the rest of us whether we want to live in a society in which everything objectionable to every contending party has been expunged from our reading materials,'' she notes. It's time, indeed, that we were asked. — Daniel J. Kevles
Textbook publishers are guilty of self-censorship, argues Ravitch (Left Back: A Century of Battles Over School Reform) in this polemical analysis of the anti-bias and sensitivity guidelines that govern much of today's educational publishing. Looking at lawsuits, school board hearings and private correspondence between textbook editors, Ravitch, a professor of education at New York University, shows how publishers are squeezed by pressure from groups on the right (which object to depictions of disobedience, family conflict, sexuality, evolution and the supernatural) and the left (which correct for the racism and sexism of older textbooks by urging stringent controls on language and images to weed out possibly offensive stereotypes)-most publishers have quietly adopted both sets of suggestions. In chapters devoted specifically to literature and history texts, Ravitch contends that these sanitized materials sacrifice literary quality and historical accuracy in order to escape controversy. She also discusses how current statewide textbook adoption methods have undermined competition and brought about the consolidation of the educational publishing industry, leading to more bland, simplistic fare. There is no shortage of colorful examples: a scientific passage about owls was rejected from a standardized test because the birds are taboo for Navajos; one set of stereotype guidelines urges writers to avoid depicting "children as healthy bundles of energy"; editors of a science textbook rejected a sentence about fossil fuels being the primary cause of global warming because "[w]e'd never be adopted in Texas." Readers will likely disagree about whether, on balance, anti-bias guidelines do more harm than good, but Ravitch's detailed, concise, impassioned argument raises crucial questions for parents and educators. Appendixes include "A Glossary of Banned Words, Usages, Stereotypes, and Topics" as well as a recommended reading list for students. Agents, Lynn Chu and Glen Hartley. (Apr.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Diane Ravitch issues a spooky wake-up call to parents and educators. In The Language Police, she explores the influence of conservative and liberal forces in this country on school textbooks. She maintains that textbook writers, editors and reviewers scrutinize these materials not just for racist and sexist language but for any potentially objectionable material. For example, to avoid occupational stereotyping, only women, not men, should be portrayed as lawyers and plumbers. Selections from great works of literature, including Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, are re-written. Ravitch challenges us to ask: How might these sanitized books, so different from the real world, affect youngsters' ability to reason and learn? 2003, Knopf, Ages 14 up.
Ravitch exposes bias among textbook publishers. This "huge scandal in American education" comes about in part because publishers do not want to offend states such as Florida, California, Texas, and New York, using the services of committees that search texts for biases of all kinds. As a result, texts have been expurgated of references to: sexual innuendo, the disabled, junk food, stereotyping of women (by showing them cooking, for example), scantily clad people, rainbows (gay agenda), age groups, religions, racial or ethnic groups, Satanism, rock and roll music, serious car accidents, parents quarreling, masks (tainted by association with Halloween), life on other planets (if the implication of evolution can be made), blizzards, hunting, gangs, ghosts, junk bonds, Christmas (or other religious holiday celebrations), abortion, farms, expensive gifts, bacon, alcoholic drinks, slaves, lying, divorce, Chief Sitting Bull (banned as a relic of colonialism; replaced with Totanka Iotanka), and corn chips. The list goes on. And it's not just textbooks that are being gutted. Tests are also carefully crafted to be inoffensive and unexciting. What to do? "When bias and sensitivity reviewers know that they can no longer censor and expurgate behind closed doors; when publishers must expect to sell their books to millions of individual teachers, not two or three powerful state school boards; when state school officials lose their power over the content of textbooks; when the public is informed about threats to intellectual freedom that is when the reign of the language police will end." Ravitch's book should be on the shelf of every public and school library in the country. KLIATT Codes:SARecommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2003, Random House, Vintage, 271p. notes. bibliog. index., Ages 15 to adult.
In this troubling account, Ravitch (education, NYU) explores a contentious topic: publishers succumbing to political interests and thus producing bland, geographically indistinguishable, and historically inaccurate textbooks and test questions for use in American schools. Ravitch recounts her own experiences as a member of a federal testing board charged with developing test questions for a standardized test. Because publishers are aware that legal challenges can hurt sales, they generally avoid anything that could be perceived as controversial. As a result, they rejected many of her selections for a variety of reasons, many of which are closely examined here. For instance, an encyclopedic passage about owls was said to reflect cultural bias (owls are taboo in Navajo culture), a story about dolphins drew complaints about regional bias (as children could not possibly imagine what it's like to live near an ocean from reading about it), and a story about pioneer quilt making by women was perceived as sexist (pioneer women should only be depicted plowing fields and chopping wood). Unlike librarians, who are familiar with self-censorship and the influence that large states have on textbook publishers, parents, educators, students, and the general public will find this detailed and highly readable analysis alarming. Recommended for all libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 1/03.]-Mark Alan Williams, Library of Congress Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Johnny and Janie can't read, can't find the Pacific on a map, can't even think-all thanks to official censorship that "represents a systemic breakdown of our ability to educate the next generation." So argues conservative pundit and Bush I assistant secretary of education Ravitch (Left Back, 2000, etc.) in a hard-hitting attack on the educational establishment and the interest groups, left and right, that control it. It's not so much that youngsters today are coddled with sensitive textbook language that bars reference to Africans as slaves or Jews as classical musicians or that dances around the non-niceties of Islamic fundamentalism, though this sort of censorship is awful enough in Ravitch's estimation; it's that contending political groups, from the Christian right to gay and lesbian alliances, have so thoroughly inserted their agendas into the classroom that it's become practically impossible to depict anyone doing anything, whether it's George Washington crossing the Delaware or George Washington Carver finding economic uses for peanuts, without arousing someone's ire. The governing idea in the resulting content-free, actor-free, active-verb-free educational scene is that no one be offended by any idea he or she is ever exposed to in the classroom-European Americans excepted, Ravitch writes, for they "are the only group that must be taken down a few pegs; their self-esteem is too high." Battles over curriculum and textbooks are nothing new, of course, as Ravitch shows; still, those battles have become particularly bitter in just the last few years: school boards, educators, and textbook publishers have so utterly given in to political pressure that no opinion-and almost no piece ofliterature-can be aired in a venue that once prided itself as a forum for the free expression of ideas, and that can now no longer teach anything of real value. Ravitch's assault is far-reaching, admirably complete, and generally nondoctrinaire. She takes on ideologues of whatever stripe, finds them all wanting, and offers, in detail, a reasonable alternative in the form of a curriculum that explains that sometimes history hasn't been very nice while allowing historical actors to speak for themselves. Of tremendous importance to parents, educational reformers, and anyone concerned with the myriad failings of the present culture. Agents: Lynn Chu, Glen Hartley/Writers Representatives
Loading...| Acknowledgments | ||
| A note to the reader | ||
| 1 | Forbidden topics, forbidden words | 3 |
| 2 | The new meaning of bias | 19 |
| 3 | Everybody does it : the textbook publishers | 31 |
| 4 | Everybody does it : the testing companies | 50 |
| 5 | Censorship from the Right | 62 |
| 6 | Censorship from the Left | 79 |
| 7 | The mad, mad, mad world of textbook adoptions | 97 |
| 8 | Literature : forgetting the tradition | 112 |
| 9 | History : the endless battle | 133 |
| 10 | The language police : can we stop them? | 157 |
| Afterword | 171 | |
| App. 1 | A glossary of banned words, usages, stereotypes, and topics | 183 |
| App. 2 | The Atkinson-Ravitch sampler of classic literature for home and school | 219 |
| Notes | 251 | |
| Bibliography | 259 | |
| Index | 263 |
loading...
loading...
loading...
Terms of Use, Copyright, and Privacy Policy
© 1997-2009 Barnesandnoble.com llc
