You can find this eye-opening book on amazon.com at the Leonard Covello link. You can also read the abbreviated version of Leonard Covello's life story in Chalkboard Champions.
Friday, August 7, 2015
Leonard Covello: The Talented Educator of Italian Immigrants
Here's a great book for anyone who is interested in progressive education or pluralism in education: Leonard Covello and the making of Benjamin Franklin High School: Education as if Citizenship Mattered. Leonard
Covello came to the United States in 1896 as a nine-year-old Italian
immigrant. Despite immense cultural and economic pressures at home,
Leonard wanted to get an education. As an adult, he analyzed these
cultural and economic pressures, which were common in Italian immigrant
households at that time. He realized that Italian parents viewed the
school as a wedge between their children and the family; he recognized
the pressure even the youngest Italian children faced to go out and get a
job rather than succeed in school. His answer? Involve the parents in
the school, and involve the students in the community. The result was
New York's Benjamin Franklin High School, a truly innovative marriage of
school and home. Lots of lessons in this story are relevant even in
today's times, especially for school personnel who are clamoring for
more involvement from parents in the school system.
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