An âunapologetic cri de coeurâ (New York Times) from the esteemed educator and bestselling author
âThe legendary reformer[âs] . . . last stand against school inequality.â âEducation Next
In 1967, Jonathan Kozolâs Death at an Early Age shook the education world, exposing the abuse and neglect of Black children in Bostonâs public schools in a National Book Awardâwinning volume. Now, after more than fifty years spent visiting struggling, unequal schools, the author that Entertainment Weekly calls âa classic American muckraker with an eloquent prose styleâ has given us a book that Bob Peterson of Rethinking Schools deems âKozol at his best.â
This âpowerful and provocative cutting-edge analysisâ (IvĂĄn Espinoza-Madrigal, executive director, Lawyers for Civil Rights) highlights the ongoing racial isolation in Americaâs public schools, compounded by rigid, punitive teaching methods. From the award-winning educator who WBUR radio says âhas spent his life devoted to exposing the harms of segregation and telling the stories of those most impacted by inequality,â An End to Inequality is called âjoltingâ by Ralph Nader, and Charlayne Hunter-Gault says âKozolâs voice remains fresh as ever.â
An âunapologetic cri de coeurâ (New York Times) from the esteemed educator and bestselling author
âThe legendary reformer[âs] . . . last stand against school inequality.â âEducation Next
In 1967, Jonathan Kozolâs Death at an Early Age shook the education world, exposing the abuse and neglect of Black children in Bostonâs public schools in a National Book Awardâwinning volume. Now, after more than fifty years spent visiting struggling, unequal schools, the author that Entertainment Weekly calls âa classic American muckraker with an eloquent prose styleâ has given us a book that Bob Peterson of Rethinking Schools deems âKozol at his best.â
This âpowerful and provocative cutting-edge analysisâ (IvĂĄn Espinoza-Madrigal, executive director, Lawyers for Civil Rights) highlights the ongoing racial isolation in Americaâs public schools, compounded by rigid, punitive teaching methods. From the award-winning educator who WBUR radio says âhas spent his life devoted to exposing the harms of segregation and telling the stories of those most impacted by inequality,â An End to Inequality is called âjoltingâ by Ralph Nader, and Charlayne Hunter-Gault says âKozolâs voice remains fresh as ever.â