R&L Education
Pages: 176
Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-60709-274-2 • Hardback • September 2009 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-60709-275-9 • Paperback • September 2009 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
978-1-60709-276-6 • eBook • September 2009 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
John Casey Hurley is a former English teacher, coach, and high school principal. He teaches educational foundations, leadership, politics, and ethics at Western Carolina University.
The existence of 50 educational systems in the United States makes it difficult to know what it means to be educated. Casey Hurley presents a meaningful answer to this problem. His definition of the educated person is a unifying theme for all educators.
— Don Chalker, former superintendent, Ypsilanti, Michigan, Public Schools
The Six Virtues of the Educated Person is a thought-provoking book for educators and parents. It helped me understand the experiences of my three children in public schools and my inability as a parent to connect with their teachers in meaningful ways. I want this vision of schooling for my children and grandchildren.
— Deborah Porto, doctoral student and public school parent
In The Six Virtues of the Educated Person, Casey Hurley draws upon 35 years in education to illuminate a new direction for schools. Those of us with experience in both public and parochial education find much that makes sense here. While public education is reeling from the current emphasis on testing, this book suggests the perfect antidote—a deep, meaningful definition of what it means to be educated. The six virtues are also a foundation for the kinds of healthy school communities our children need.
— Robert Heideman, guidance counselor, Rhinelander (Wisconsin) High School
The six virtues are the purest distillate of educational aims. In our school they provide a clear purpose for students, teachers and our communities.
— Wayne Robinson, principal, Quality Academics, Kingston, Jamaica
If we want to take a refreshing look at education, Hurley's Six Virtues of the Educated Person provides the out-of-the-box thinking that is necessary when our schools are not working like they should.
— Bevar Moodie, retired principal, Jose Marti Technical High School, Spanish Town, Jamaica
Urges readers to take a step back from the question of purpose to ask an even bigger question: what does it mean to be an educated person?
— H.M. Miller; Choice Reviews, June 2010
This book describes the educated person in terms of six virtues-understanding, imagination, strong character, courage, humility, and generosity. Readers will find that it challenges many of their current educational assumptions. This was true for me. As I compared my long-held beliefs to the author's alternative model I found that it helped me understand the frustrations I've felt about the failures of school reform.
— Gayle Moller, Coauthor, Awakening the Sleeping Giant and Lead with Me
My doctoral students were intrigued by The Six Virtues of the Educated Person. The ideas in this book made them think in new ways about leadership.
— Sandra Tonnsen, professor of educational leadership, Western Carolina University
For more information, please visit
.