------------------------------------------------------------ ERIC NO: ED169671 AVAILABILITY: Document Not Available from EDRS. AUTHOR: Rubin, Louis, Ed. TITLE: Educational Reform for a Changing Society: Anticipating Tomorrow's Schools. YEAR: 1978 PUB TYPE: Book; Collection; Position paper LANGUAGE: English ABSTRACT: The essays in this book emphasize trends now shaping society that the authors believe will have a profound effect on schools in the decades to come. Topics covered include declining enrollments and increasing educational costs, the changing role of vocational education, government financing for educational quality, the role of busing, politicking skills for school administrators, and the growing importance of the community-based school. Shirley Chisholm and Richard S. Schweiker deal with developing political trends concerning education from their point of view as members of key education committees in the United States Congress. Topics that will affect future schools and educators are discussed by social and educational leaders Robert G. Scanlon, Ralph W. Tyler, Urie Bronfenbrenner, Elise Boulding, and Louis Rubin. R. Buckminster Fuller and Jonas Salk look at education in the congested world of the future from the point of view of the scientific community. Following each essay, Louis Rubin highlights its inherent implications for education and extracts significant research and development issues. (Author/JM) NOTES: 215p. Allyn and Bacon, Longwood Division, 470 Atlantic Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02210 ($13.95) MAJOR DESC: Educational Change; Futures (of Society); Social Change; Trend Analysis MINOR DESC: Administration; Books; Bus Transportation; Community Schools; Costs; Declining Enrollment; Disadvantaged; Educational Administration; Educational History; Educational Philosophy; Equal Education; Essays; Ethical Instruction; Family Environment; Family Role; Human Development; Instructional Program Divisions; Leadership; Prediction; Problem Solving; Research Problems; Vocational Education INSTITUTION: Research for Better Schools, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.