Tuesday, January 13, 2026
The Cradle of Citizenship by James Traub
THE CRADLE OF CITIZENSHIP by James Traub
is subtitled “How Schools Can Help Save Our Democracy” and Traub spent over a
year visiting schools around the country. He rightly notes that “we no longer
have common criteria for truth” and “we have very few civic levers other that
school left to pull.” In general, however, I honestly found the arguments in this
text difficult to interpret. Traub has a view, but he buries it in so much talk
about standards and classroom experience that it was difficult for me (a former
teacher) to summarize. I did find it interesting that the Wall
Street Journal (strong pro-charter school stance) published both an excerpt (promoting classical education) and a review by Meghan Cox Gurdon. She seems to believe that Traub was too
progressive in his approach, but I found him to be negative towards standards
and teaching pedagogy. It is disquieting to think about the divergence (both in
content knowledge and methodology) between teachers from different generations
and the likely impact on students. Although I had hoped to purchase THE
CRADLE OF CITIZENSHIP and to encourage our Social Studies Department
teachers to read this text, I am hesitant to do so after struggling with the
preview. Traub did make me think and he encouraged me to look at the bipartisan
effort named Educating for American Democracy and their Roadmap. He clearly cares about America
and its citizens.
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