
How to Educate a Citizen
The Power of Shared Knowledge to Unify a Nation
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Narrated by:
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Rob Shapiro
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By:
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E. D. Hirsch
“Profound, vital and correct. Hirsch highlights the essence of our American being and the radical changes in education necessary to sustain that essence. Concerned citizens, teachers, and parents take note! We ignore this book at our peril." (Joel Klein, former chancellor of New York City Public Schools)
In this powerful manifesto, the best-selling author of Cultural Literacy addresses the failures of America’s early education system and its impact on our current national malaise, advocating for a shared knowledge curriculum students everywhere can be taught - an educational foundation that can help improve and strengthen America’s unity, identity, and democracy.
In How to Educate a Citizen, E.D. Hirsch continues the conversation he began 30 years ago with his classic best seller Cultural Literacy, urging America’s public schools, particularly at the elementary level, to educate our children more effectively to help heal and preserve the nation. Since the 1960s, our schools have been relying on “child-centered learning”. History, geography, science, civics, and other essential knowledge have been dumbed down by vacuous learning “techniques” and “values-based” curricula; indoctrinated by graduate schools of education, administrators and educators have believed they are teaching reading and critical thinking skills. Yet these cannot be taught in the absence of strong content, Hirsch argues.
The consequence is a loss of shared knowledge that would enable us to work together, understand one another, and make coherent, informed decisions. A broken approach to school not only leaves our children underprepared and erodes the American dream, but also loosens the spiritual bonds and unity that hold the nation together.
Drawing on early schoolmasters and educational reformers such as Noah Webster and Horace Mann, Hirsch charts the rise and fall of the American early education system and provides a blueprint for closing the national gap in knowledge, communications, and allegiance. Critical and compelling, How to Educate a Citizen galvanizes our schools to equip children with the power of shared knowledge.
Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2020 E. D. Hirsch (P)2020 HarperCollins PublishersListeners also enjoyed...




















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Must read
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eye opening and timely
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Read or Listen to this book.
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Give American children the chance
Awakening
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We need to take back education
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very enlightening
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Timely & important, but not a bullseye
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Egg heady stuff
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Disclaimer: lots of pedagogy books are just bad fads. The most useful one this year was Aims of Education by North Whitehead, though the math chapters were not that helpful for me.
There are good basic ideas in this book, but books can’t stand alone on broad ideas like educated citizens and shared culture.
Pretending like most of American schools are either only student centered or knowledge centered is dishonest. The entire book is based upon that false premise. Maybe, that’s an east coast issue, but in Nebraska we don’t teach in such fixed ways. The book is also rooted in the idea that we no longer have a shared culture and that ELA canon doesn’t exist anymore and that’s why we’re polarized and our students are struggling.
No mention of smart phones or technology or changes in culture or high teacher turnover/burnout or widening income gaps or busier parents that might want to be more friends than authority figures or a general decline in reading—just that America is more divided because fewer kids are reading The Scarlet Letter (obviously exaggerating).
I struggled to finish this because it felt liked bombastic news segment almost the entire time. Last book I try by this clown.
Very disappointed
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