Sermon on Educational Research

This is a piece I published in 2012 in Bildungsgeschichte: International Journal for the Historiography of Education.  It draws on my experience over the years working with doctoral students in education.  The advice, basically, is to approach your apprenticeship in educational research doing the opposite of what everyone else tells you to do.  Hope you like it. SERMON ON EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH … Continue reading Sermon on Educational Research

Two Cheers for School Bureaucracy

This post is a piece I wrote for Kappan, published in the March 2020 edition.  Here’s a link to the PDF. Bureaucracies are often perceived as inflexible, impersonal, hierarchical, and too devoted to rules and red tape. But here I make a case for these characteristics being a positive in the world of public education. U.S. schools are … Continue reading Two Cheers for School Bureaucracy

What if Napoleon Had Won at Waterloo?

Today I want to explore an interesting case of counterfactual history.  What would have happened if Napoleon Bonaparte had won in 1815 at the Battle of Waterloo?  What consequences might have followed for Europe in the next two centuries?  That he might have succeeded is not mere fantasy.  According to the victor, Lord Wellington, the … Continue reading What if Napoleon Had Won at Waterloo?

School Gave Me the Creeps

This post is a piece I wrote not long ago, something I’ve been meaning to write for years.  An alternative title is: “School — Can’t Live With It, Can’t Live Without It.”   See what you think. School Gave Me the Creeps David Labaree             Did you like school?  I didn’t.            … Continue reading School Gave Me the Creeps

Rags to Riches: How US Higher Ed Went from Pitiful to Powerful

This is a piece I published in Aeon in October, 2017.  It provides an overview of my book that came out that year, A Perfect Mess: The Unlikely Ascendancy of American Higher Education.  It’s a highly improbable rags-to-riches story, in which the US system of higher education went from pitiful in the 19th century to powerful in the … Continue reading Rags to Riches: How US Higher Ed Went from Pitiful to Powerful

My New Book Is Out: Being a Scholar

This post is a preview of my new book, which I just published with Kindle.  It's available on Amazon both as an e-book and a paperback.  The title is Being a Scholar: Reflections on Doctoral Study, Scholarly Writing, and Academic Life.   Below is the book's introduction, which provides the rationale for the book and summarizes … Continue reading My New Book Is Out: Being a Scholar

Adventures in Scholarship

This piece is an essay about my life in scholarship and some of the lessons I learned from it.  It was written in mid career, after publishing The Trouble with Ed Schools, and it first appeared in print as the introduction to a 2005 book called Education, Markets, and the Public Good: The Selected Works of David … Continue reading Adventures in Scholarship

School Gave Me the Creeps

This post is a piece I wrote recently, something I’ve been meaning to write for years.  An alternative title is: “School — Can’t Live With It, Can’t Live Without It.”  Here’s a link to the Word document. See what you think. School Gave Me the Creeps David Labaree             Did you like school?  I didn’t.    … Continue reading School Gave Me the Creeps

How Not to Defend the Private Research University

This post is a piece I published in 2020 in the Chronicle Review.  Here's a link to the original.  It’s about an issue that has been gnawing at me for years.  How can you justify the existence of institutions of the sort I taught at for the last two decades — rich private research universities?  … Continue reading How Not to Defend the Private Research University

Luck and Pluck — Alternative Stories of Life in the Meritocracy

This post is a piece I published three years ago in Aeon.  Here’s the link to the original.  I wrote this after years of futile efforts to get Stanford students to think critically about how they got to their current location at the top of the meritocracy.  It was nearly impossible to get students to consider … Continue reading Luck and Pluck — Alternative Stories of Life in the Meritocracy