Background
Shirley, Dennis Lynn was born on February 28, 1955 in Columbia, South Carolina. Son of Edward Lynn and Margaret Jane (Farnham) Shirley.
( In March 1933, Nazi storm troopers seized control of th...)
In March 1933, Nazi storm troopers seized control of the Odenwaldschule, a small German boarding school near Heidelberg. Founded in 1910 by educational reformer Paul Geheeb, the Odenwaldschule was a crown jewel of the progressive education movement, renowned for its emancipatory pedagogical innovations and sweeping curricular reforms. In the tumultuous year that followed that fateful spring, Geheeb moved from an initial effort to accommodate Nazi reforms to an active opposition to the Third Reich's transformation of the school. Convinced at last that humanistic education was all but impossible under the new regime, he emigrated to Switzerland in March 1934. There he opened a new school, the Ecole d'Humanite, which became a haven for children escaping the horrors of World War II. In this intimate chronicle of the collision between a progressive educator and fascist ideology during Hitler's rise to power, Dennis Shirley explores how Nazi school reforms catalyzed Geheeb's alienation from the regime and galvanized his determination to close the school and leave Germany. Drawing on a wealth of unpublished documents, such as Geheeb's exhaustive correspondence with government officials and transcripts of combative faculty meetings, Shirley is able to reconstruct in detail the entire drama as it unfolded. Others have examined the intellectual antecedents of Nazism and the regime's success at developing themes from popular culture for its political purposes; Shirley goes further by analyzing the many ways in which German educators could and did respond to Nazi reforms. In the process he identifies the myriad forces that led individuals to accept or resist the regime's transformation of education. The Politics of Progressive Education offers a richly rewarding examination of how education in general, and progressive education in particular, fared in the turbulent political currents of Nazi Germany. It brings to light a remarkable story, hitherto untold, of one individual's successful attempt to uphold humanistic values in the darkest of circumstances.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0674687590/?tag=2022091-20
(Observers of all political persuasions agree that our urb...)
Observers of all political persuasions agree that our urban schools are in a state of crisis. Yet most efforts at school reform treat schools as isolated institutions, disconnected from the communities in which they are embedded and insulated from the political realities which surround them. Community Organizing for Urban School Reform tells the story of a radically different approach to educational change. Using a case study approach, Dennis Shirley describes how working-class parents, public school teachers, clergy, social workers, business partners, and a host of other engaged citizens have worked to improve education in inner-city schools. Their combined efforts are linked through the community organizations of the Industrial Areas Foundation, which have developed a network of over seventy "Alliance Schools" in poor and working-class neighborhoods throughout Texas. This deeply democratic struggle for school reform contains important lessons for all of the nation's urban areas. It provides a striking point of contrast to orthodox models of change and places the political empowerment of low-income parents at the heart of genuine school improvement and civic renewal.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0292777183/?tag=2022091-20
Shirley, Dennis Lynn was born on February 28, 1955 in Columbia, South Carolina. Son of Edward Lynn and Margaret Jane (Farnham) Shirley.
Bachelor, University of Virginia, 1977; Master of Arts in Sociology, New School for Social Research, 1980; Doctor of Education, Harvard University, 1988.
Teacher, Ecole D'Humanité, Goldern, Switzerland, 1980-1983; professor, Rice U., Houston, since 1988.
( In March 1933, Nazi storm troopers seized control of th...)
(Observers of all political persuasions agree that our urb...)
Married Laura Shelley Cochran, January 5, 1960. Children: Syke Alta, Gabriel DeLayne.