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The Education Trap

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Why—contrary to much expert and popular opinion—more education may not be the answer to skyrocketing inequality.
For generations, Americans have looked to education as the solution to economic disadvantage. Yet, although more people are earning degrees, the gap between rich and poor is widening. Cristina Groeger delves into the history of this seeming contradiction, explaining how education came to be seen as a panacea even as it paved the way for deepening inequality.
The Education Trap returns to the first decades of the twentieth century, when Americans were grappling with the unprecedented inequities of the Gilded Age. Groeger's test case is the city of Boston, which spent heavily on public schools. She examines how workplaces came to depend on an army of white-collar staff, largely women and second-generation immigrants, trained in secondary schools. But Groeger finds that the shift to more educated labor had negative consequences—both intended and unintended—for many workers. Employers supported training in schools in order to undermine the influence of craft unions, and so shift workplace power toward management. And advanced educational credentials became a means of controlling access to high-paying professional and business jobs, concentrating power and wealth. Formal education thus became a central force in maintaining inequality.
The idea that more education should be the primary means of reducing inequality may be appealing to politicians and voters, but Groeger warns that it may be a dangerous policy trap. If we want a more equitable society, we should not just prescribe more time in the classroom, but fight for justice in the workplace.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 4, 2021
      Groeger, a professor of history at Lake Forest College, debuts with an incisive reconsideration of the relationship between education and socioeconomic inequality. Complicating the popular notion that education is the best means to improve social mobility and increase wages, Groeger takes Progressive-era Boston as a case study in how “educational achievement (or lack thereof) became a new way of explaining and justifying the wealth of some and the poverty of others.” Increased access to education was intended to mitigate class divisions reinforced by the informal social and family networks most people relied on to find employment, Groeger explains, but the underdevelopment of vocational training programs meant that recent immigrants and African Americans got stuck in low-wage service and manual labor jobs. Groeger also looks at how an influx of educated women and second-generation immigrants into sales and clerical jobs sparked a backlash among upper-class Bostonians, who used “advanced education credentials” (i.e., diplomas from elite universities) to limit access to the highest-paying white-collar jobs. Combining fine-grained census data with testimony from workers across a wide range of fields, Groeger makes a persuasive case that education is not necessarily the “great equalizer” it’s often touted to be. Policymakers, economists, and education reformers will want to take note.

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  • English

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