Sold Out

How Marketing in School Threatens Children's Well-Being and Undermines their Education

Alex Molnar author Faith Boninger author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield

Published:7th Aug '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Sold Out cover

If you strip away the rosy language of “school-business partnership,” “win-win situation,” “giving back to the community,” and the like, what you see when you look at corporate marketing activities in the schools is example after example of the exploitation of children for financial gain. Over the long run the financial benefit marketing in schools delivers to corporations rests on the ability of advertising to “brand” students and thereby help insure that they will be customers for life. This process of “branding” involves inculcating the value of consumption as the primary mechanism for achieving happiness, demonstrating success, and finding fulfillment. Along the way, “branding” children – just like branding cattle – inflicts pain. Yet school districts, desperate for funding sources, often eagerly welcome marketers and seem not to recognize the threats that marketing brings to children’s well-being and to the integrity of the education they receive. Given that all ads in school pose some threat to children, it is past time for considering whether marketing activities belong in school. Schools should be ad-free zones.

ISBN: 9781475813609

Dimensions: 235mm x 162mm x 26mm

Weight: 576g

294 pages