Home
Home
    • Store Hours
    • Upcoming Events
    • Contact Us
    • My Account

Search


Advanced Search

Shopping cart

View your shopping cart.
  • About Kobo eBooks
  • Browse eBooks

Located in uptown
New Orleans, Louisiana

513 Octavia Street
(corner of Laurel)
504-899-READ (7323)

Gift Cards

  • Order Gift Cards
  • Check Balance 

From Our Store

  • Local Flavors - New Orleans and Beyond
  • May We Recommend
  • Location
  • Reading Groups
  • Find Us On Facebook
  • Local Authors
  • Signed Books
  • Photos
The Octavian
  • THE OCTAVIAN newsletter

Upcoming events

  • Claire Manes - OUT OF THE SHADOW OF LEPROSY (11 days)
  • Sheila Heti - HOW SHOULD A PERSON BE?(36 days)
  • Victoria Rowell - THE YOUNG AND THE RUTHLESS(42 days)
  • Peter M. Wolf - MY NEW ORLEANS, GONE AWAY(47 days)
  • Matthew Guinn - THE RESURRECTIONIST(55 days)
  • Richard Sexton ▪ Randy Harelson ▪ Brian Costello ─ NEW ROADS AND OLD RIVERS(60 days)
Add to iCalendar
more

Links

Walter Isaacson interview by Fred Kasten at Octavia Books for The Sound of Books
  • The Sound of Books with Fred Kasten
  • The Reading Life with Susan Larson
  • Stay Local! New Orleans
  • Indiebound.org

Affiliate Program

Become an Affiliate
Memorial Day - Come In, We're Open.

Sarah Carr - HOPE AGAINST HOPE: Three Schools, One City, and the Struggle to Educate America's Children

  • Author Event
03/05/2013 6:00 pm

Please join us for a presentation and booksigning with reporter Sarah Carr featuring her new book, HOPE AGAINST HOPE, a moving portrait of school reform in New Orleans told through the eyes of a family, a teacher, and a principal.

"It's work like this that makes journalism truly matter, that makes clear that reportage is not merely about fact and argument and theory, but about human lives in the balance. In Hope Against Hope, Sarah Carr has taken an open mind and a careful eye to the delicate, complicated issue of public education and the fading American commitment to equality of opportunity. She does so not by embracing ideological cant or political banter, but by following people through the schools of New Orleans, a city that is trying desperately to reconstitute and better itself after a near-death experience. Don't embarrass yourself by speaking further on American education without first reading this."—David Simon, creator of The Wire and Treme

“Of the many dreams and schemes for upgrading New Orleans after Katrina, the controversial, convulsive overhaul of the city’s public schools is the one that really happened. Sarah Carr offers readers a ringside seat on an attempted revolution. No one who cares about public education in America can afford to ignore this balanced and vivid account.”—Jed Horne, author of Breach of Faith: Hurricane Katrina and the Near Death of a Great American City 

In September 2005, just days after Katrina, the New Orleans school board placed its thousands of employees on unpaid leave. Three months later it effectively voted to fire them. And in November, the state legislature removed most of the city’s public schools from the control of the locally elected board and placed them in the Recovery School District, with key officials intending to turn them over to charter operators. They had plenty of evidence to support their case: the failure of nearly two thirds of the schools to meet the state’s minimum criteria for academic performance; the school district’s impending financial ruin; nearly $70 million in federal money not accounted for properly; the FBI investigators who moved into the school system offices to probe financial irregularities, crumbling facilities where hallways smelled of urine; the near complete abandonment of the public schools by the city’s middle and upper classes and the shocking disinvestment of those with power and money that ensued; the frustration and anger of many of those left behind; and the undervalued children who, taking stock of it all, not infrequently gave up.

Some call the education overhaul a clean slate and fresh start for one of the country’s worst school systems. Others describe it as disaster capitalism at its most flagrant and destructive. But regardless, the reinvention of New Orleans schools after Katrina became the nation’s most comprehensive test case for a school reform agenda favored by a diverse coalition including President Obama, hedge fund billionaires, and young idealists.

In HOPE AGAINST HOPE: Three Schools, One City, and the Struggle to Educate America’s Children, education reporter Sarah Carr tells the story of this reinvention through the varying perspectives and experiences of the people living it.

Over the course of a year, Carr immersed herself in the lives of veteran principal Mary Laurie, new teacher Aidan Kelly, and fourteen-year-old Geraldlynn Stewart and her family. She observed hundreds of classes, visited colleges with students, sat in on professional retreats and staff meetings, and shadowed her subjects late into the night.

The debate over urban education in America, crystallized in New Orleans, speaks to broad, deeply rooted tensions in our country over what the civil rights movement should look like in the 21st century, and who should lead it. It speaks to fundamental disagreements over how the push for racial equality should proceed, at a time when the end goal remains as elusive as ever. And it speaks to a nationwide loss of trust — in our public institutions, each other and ourselves. At its heart, HOPE AGAINST HOPE is the story of our community’s painful struggle — in the wake of one of the most tragic disasters in our history — to rebuild that trust.

Sarah Carr has written about education for the last twelve years, reporting on the growth in online learning in higher education, the battle over vouchers and charter schools in urban districts, and the struggle to educate China’s massive population of migrant children. Her work has been honored with numerous national awards and fellowships, most recently a Spencer Education Journalist Fellowship at Columbia University. She lives in New Orleans, where she covered schools for the Times-Picayune. Hope Against Hope is her first book.

Hope Against Hope: Three Schools, One City, and the Struggle to Educate America's Children (Hardcover)

By Sarah Carr
$27.00
ISBN-13: 9781608194902
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Bloomsbury Press, 2/2013
Other Editions of this Title

Location: 
Street:
513 Octavia St
City:
New Orleans
,
Province:
Louisiana
Postal Code:
70115-2055
Country:
United States
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google
  • Google Buzz
  • Yahoo
  • MySpace
  • LinkedIn
  • Calendar
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Event Emails
Join Our Email List
» JOIN NOW
Copyright © Octavia Books, LLC