ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1995. This study of the integration of East and West German education following the collapse of the German Democratic Republic in 1989 focuses on policy formation and implementation during this period of great social and political turbulence. It is the result of a research project undertaken shortly after the unification. The authors lived in East Germany for a full year, looking carefully at individual schools, vocational training centers, teacher colleges, and universities.

The book considers questions of how education policy is successfully formulated, conditions in which that policy is implemented and the consequences of the implemented educational reform. The first chapters present the context and history of German education and the later chapters discuss the unification and the formation of the new school laws and the successes and failures. The authors' research shows that even before the unification East Germans had already opted for a system consistent with West German education law. However, the West Germans disregarded these changes and imposed their own version of reform on East Germany. The German situation at this time is of great interest to all educators, particularly students of educational policy making, as well as researchers in political science, economics, and sociology.

part I|95 pages

The Context

chapter I|15 pages

Education and Social Change in Germany

chapter II|7 pages

The Politics of Division and Unification

chapter III|32 pages

Education in the Federal Republic of Germany

chapter IV|26 pages

Education in the German Democratic Republic

chapter V|11 pages

Teachers and Teaching in the Two Germanys

part II|59 pages

The Collapse and Its Aftermath

chapter VI|23 pages

Crisis and Collapse in the 1980s

chapter VII|33 pages

Creativity in East German Schooling

part III|64 pages

The Unification of the Two Germanys

chapter VIII|30 pages

Toward a West German Education Model

chapter IX|12 pages

School Laws in the New States of Germany

chapter X|20 pages

Transformed Education in the New States

part IV|62 pages

Some Special Cases

chapter XI|10 pages

Gender Issues Related to Work and Education

chapter XII|17 pages

Family Education

chapter XIII|19 pages

Free-time and Education

chapter XIV|12 pages

Education, Extremism, and the Foreigner

part V|13 pages

Beyond the New States of Germany