Eric Kalenze's book is a valuable contribution to the education reform conversation. He argues persuasively that America's public schools need to get back to their fundamental mission of preparing young people for success in society as it is--not for some utopian future in which self-actualization is all that matters. Here's hoping this dose of reality permeates the thoughtworld of our education system.Our earliest thinkers about public education saw schools as indispensable institutions, endowing Americas children with common knowledge, practical skills, civic dispositions and habits.? We went to school to become Americans. ?Today, Eric Kalenze correctly observes, schools exist to provide the whole development of each individual child.? The result is a kind of mission creep. ?We are doing too many things and none of them well. ?Current reform efforts are missing the mark badly, as did progressive education reform that preceded them.? Kalenzes wise book Education Is Upside Down describes how American education lost its way and its founding purposeand how we might get them back.In?Education Is Upside Down, Eric Kalenze offers a provocative critique of todays reform efforts. He argues that real transformation will require rethinking the larger purposes of educationthat anything less will disappoint. This intriguing volume touches on educational philosophy, history, and some of the highlights of contemporary reform, while closing with a bracing call that we ask students themselves to share in the accountability we ask of educators.In this broad survey of education in America today, Eric Kalenze offers a refreshing diagnosis of what is wrong, why and when it happened, and what to do. He is equally adept at tracing the genesis of bad ideas 100 years back as he is at analyzing the?heated debate over Common Core. The arguments are brisk, the prose limpid--an excellent primer for young educators looking to understand current conditions.Education Is Upside Down urges lƒ+