What's Hot| Upload Video| Email this Page| Your Account

The Language Police: How Pressure Groups Restrict What Students Learn

If you’re an actress or a coed just trying to do a man-size job, a yes-man who turns a deaf ear to some sob sister, an heiress aboard her yacht, or a bookworm enjoying a boy’s night out, Diane Ravitch’s internationally acclaimed The Language Police has bad news for you: Erase those words from your vocabulary!
Textbook publishers and state education agencies have sought to root out racist, sexist, and elitist language in classroom and library materials. But according to Diane Ravitch, a leading historian of education, what began with the best of intentions has veered toward bizarre extremes. At a time when we celebrate and encourage diversity, young readers are fed bowdlerized texts, devoid of the references that give these works their meaning and vitality. With forceful arguments and sensible solutions for rescuing American education from the pressure groups that have made classrooms bland and uninspiring, The Language Police offers a powerful corrective to a cultural scandal.

The impulse in the 1960s and `70s to achieve fairness and a balanced perspective in our nation's textbooks and standardized exams was undeniably necessary and commendable. Then how could it have gone so terribly wrong? Acclaimed education historian Diane Ravitch answers this question in her informative and alarming book, The Language Police: How Pressure Groups Restrict What Students Learn. Author of 7 books, Ravitch served as the U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education from 1991 to 1993. Her expertise and her 30-year commitment to education lend authority and urgency to this important book, which describes in copious detail how pressure groups from the political right and left have wrested control of the language and content of textbooks and standardized exams, often at the expense of the truth (in the case of history), of literary quality (in the case of literature), and of education in general. Like most people involved in education, Ravitch did not realize "that educational materials are now governed by an intricate set of rules to screen out language and topics that might be considered controversial or offensive." In this clear-eyed critique, she is an unapologetic challenger of the ridiculous and damaging extremes to which bias guidelines and sensitivity training have been taken by the federal government, the states, and textbook publishers.

In a multi-page sampling of rejected test passages, we discover that "in the new meaning of bias, it its considered biased to acknowledge that lack of sight is a disability," that children who live in urban areas cannot understand passages about the country, that the Aesop fable about a vain (female) fox and a flattering (male) crow promotes gender bias. As outrageous as many of the examples are, they do not appear particularly dangerous. However, as the illustrations of abridgment, expurgation, and bowdlerization mount, the reader begins to understand that our educational system is indeed facing a monumental crisis of distortion and censorship. Ravitich ends her book with three suggestions of how to counter this disturbing tendency. Sadly, however, in the face of the overwhelming tide of misinformation that has already been entrenched in the system, her suggestions provide cold comfort. --Silvana Tropea

  more

BestDeal

$10.20 at Amazon
04:37

The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in...

This is a very eye opening book about public schools in the USThe Shame of the Nation: The...

04:43

Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons

This is a fantastic book. I was able to take my 3 year old daughter from basic phonics to a 1st...

01:34

The Prince

A review of The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli, Fiction Books, Books

04:06

The Well-Trained Mind: A Guide to Classical Education at Home,...

Based on the theories behind Classical Education, this book gives in-depth information about how...

01:39

To Kill a Mockingbird

A great children's novel.

01:45

To Kill a Mockingbird

a classic

ComparePrices

Get price with tax & shipping*
Sold at 2 Stores
title,descmerchant price seeit
Smarter Choice
The Language Police: How Pressure...

Diane Ravitch / 2004 / 288 pages Books

  • $10.50
  • Free Shipping
  • Coupon

    2 coupons available

    • Code:No Code Required
    • Detail:

      Free Standard shipping on any order at DeepDiscount.

    • Expires:Aug-31-2010
    • Restriction:Unknow
    • Code:
    • Detail:

      Free USPS shipping at DeepDiscount.com

    • Expires:Nov-20-2010
    • Restriction:Unknow
See it
The Language Police: How Pressure...

Pages: 288, Paperback, Vintage

  • $10.20
  • Coupon

    1 coupon available

    • Code:No Code Required
    • Detail:

      FREE Shipping on orders over $25 at Amazon.

    • Expires:Dec-31-2010
    • Restriction:Some restrictions apply. See site for details.
See it

*Shipping costs are based on an estimate of the lowest shipping rate available within the contiguous US, excluding Alaska and Hawaii. Only merchants with this product in stock are listed (Merchants with this product back ordered have been removed from this list).

Do you see a pricing error? Please let us know by filling out a simple form: Click here

MoreStores

Write a review

ProductReviews92/100 (87 Reviews)

Recent Reviews

5/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Aug-18-2009
Astonishing

As a teacher it is amazing to me just how much censorship exists in the world. This book served to open my eyes to the issue of censorship in schools.Not recommended for the overtly Politically Correct.Recommended for those with open...

read full review | report as inappropriate
5/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Mar-09-2009
Important for Anyone Who Cares About Free Thought and American Education

Diane Ravitch has written an extremely important book about censorship from the left and the right, and how it harms students' education. From the feminists and multiculturalists on the left to the fundamentalists on the right,...

read full review | report as inappropriate
2/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Jul-23-2008
not what's advertised

I regret purchasing this book for two sets of reasons:I. Random House markets this as a general discussion of contemporary "language policing" while it really only deals with the consequences of the lobbying by pressure groups on the...

read full review | report as inappropriate
5/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Jul-12-2008
I'm Okay, You're Okay! Gone Psychotic.

The author catalogues how special interests and the education industry control speech and ideas in the schools. The other reviews give you all the details.F.A.Hayek, Nobel Laureate and liberal, cautioned that you never really know where...

read full review | report as inappropriate

Selected Reviews

5/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Aug-18-2009
Astonishing

As a teacher it is amazing to me just how much censorship exists in the world. This book served to open my eyes to the issue of censorship in schools.Not recommended for the overtly Politically Correct.Recommended for those with open...

read full review | report as inappropriate
3/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Jul-28-2005
Noble Intentions, Flawed Execution

_The Language Police_ is both profoundly important and profoundly frustrating. It is important because it calls attention to the fact that most public school textbooks are utterly wretched--boring, colorless, bland, and uninvolving--and...

read full review | report as inappropriate
2/5
From: Amazon
Posted: Jul-23-2008
not what's advertised

I regret purchasing this book for two sets of reasons:I. Random House markets this as a general discussion of contemporary "language policing" while it really only deals with the consequences of the lobbying by pressure groups on the...

read full review | report as inappropriate
10
Page 1 of 1

SimilarProducts

Channel Directory:

Science Fiction |  Comic Books |  Cookbooks |  Biographies |  Children's Books
close
close

More legal stuff: Smarter.com is a comparison shopping website that compares prices and products at online stores to help consumers save money. Stores are responsible for providing us with accurate price and product information, including the proper codes for coupons, discounts and rebates. Tax and shipping costs are estimates. Please confirm all costs before making your final purchase at the online store. All merchant ratings, product reviews and video reviews are submitted by shoppers or third-party websites. We are not responsible for their content. If you have any concerns about content on our website, please contact us.