Class Dismissed

ebook Making College Work for Everyone in a Deeply Divided America

By Richard Greenwald

cover image of Class Dismissed

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  • Perennial news topic: Debates about postsecondary education have swelled recently. Books on this subject get heavy pick-up during the back-to-school and college acceptance seasons. Public interest has swung toward understanding the costs, value, and significance of college, particularly for low and middle income students—topics that anchor Class Dismissed.
  • Established media platform: Greenwald's writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune, LA Times, In These Times, The Progressive, Bookforum, Businessweek, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and on The Brooklyn Rail, The Rumpus, Inside Higher Education, Atlantic Cities (Atlantic Magazine project), and Bloomberg Echoes.
  • Dedicated funding for promotion: Additional marketing support is provided by the Kresge Foundation.
  • Well-positioned to opine on this subject: Greenwald is a social historian of modern America with expertise in labor, politics, and the workforce. He's been an administrator in three colleges that serve working-class students, the sort he was once, which shapes his astuteness at parsing matters of class. He's a respected higher education leader who regularly attends/speaks at popular conferences including the Harvard Institute for Leadership and Management in Higher Education and the Organization of American Historians among others.
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    In this provocative new book, Richard A. Greenwald—a working-class kid from Queens turned historian, professor, and college dean—argues that we are at a fork in the road. The country can either move further into a two-tier higher education system divided by class and access, or we can stop talking naively about college as an engine of opportunity and start making it one.
    Class Dismissed leads with a discerning history of higher ed battles that still reverberate in the current times, whether over Reagan-era cultural attacks and budget cuts or veterans' opportunities. Greenwald proceeds to expose the dangers of a system shaped by elitism and thoughtfully analyze how the needs of today's working-class students and their schools are unmet and misunderstood—enlightening us on everything from costs, resource allocation, and job training to the implications of adjuncts, reputation, and MOOCs.
    With a fresh voice that stands apart from the perennial pontificators who typically dominate the public conversation on college, Greenwald reminds readers that it's always been uncomfortable to talk openly and honestly about class. He warns that if we continue to dismiss where and how the mass of American students go to school rather than expand the debate over the future of higher education, we are destined to end up with a simulacrum of what college should be.

  • Class Dismissed