"…examines issues of class difference across race, gender, and geography to provide an expansive exploration of schooling within changing economic structures." — CHOICE<br /><br />"Sociologists with strong interests in social class and education will definitely want to take a look at this book…" — Teaching Sociology<br /><br />"…one of the most important characteristics of the book … is its attempt to answer the question of 'What is to be done?' By taking seriously the issue of 'emancipatory' pedagogies (the plural is crucial here), [the authors] … are not satisfied with bearing witness to negativity—although this is a crucial act for researchers to engage in. They also want to open the spaces for possible interruption and intervention. As I have argued at length elsewhere, this is one of the more significant roles that critical scholars can play in a time of conservative attacks on everything we hold dear … this is a book that deserves our attention." — from the Foreword by Michael W. Apple<br /><br />"Anyone who reads this volume will find it difficult to deny the many ways in which class can shape and be shaped by the experiences of children in schools. This is a groundbreaking book." — Cynthia Gerstl-Pepin, coauthor of Re-framing Educational Politics for Social Justice

b>Winner of the 2007 Critics' Choice Award presented by the American Educational Studies AssociationLate to Class presents theoretical, empirical, and pedagogical perspectives on social class and schooling in the United States. Grounding their analyses at the intersections of class, ethnicity, gender, geography, and schooling, the contributors examine the educational experiences of poor, working class, and middle class students against the backdrop of complicated class stratification in a shifting global economy. Together, they explore the salience of class in understanding the social, economic, and cultural landscapes within which young people in the United States come to understand the meaning of their formal education in times of changing opportunity.
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Looks at the educational experiences of poor, working class, and middle class students against the backdrop of complicated class stratification in a shifting global economy.
Foreword Introduction Jane A. Van Galen Part 1: Getting to Class 1. Growing Up as Poor, White Trash: Stories of Where I Come From Beth Hatt 2. Class/Culture/Action: Representation, Identity, and Agency in Educational Analysis Bill J. Johnston Part 2: Class Work 3. Living Class as a Girl Deborah Hicks and Stephanie Jones 4. Marginalization and Membership Jill Koyama and Margaret A. Gibson 5. Orchestrating Habitus and Figured Worlds: Chicana/o Educational Mobility and Social Class Luis Urrieta Jr. 6. High School Students’ Exploration of Class Differences in a Multicultural Literature Class Richard Beach, Daryl Parks, Amanda Thein, and Timothy Lensmire 7. Social Class and African-American Parental Involvement Cheryl Fields-Smith 8. Social Heteroglossia: The Contentious Practice or Potential Place of Middle-Class Parents in Home–School Relations Janice Kroeger Part 3: After Class 9. (Re)Turning to Marx to Understand the Unexpected Anger Among “Winners” in Schooling: A Critical Social Psychology Perspective Ellen Brantlinger 10. The Problem of Poverty: Shifting Attention to the Non-Poor Maike Ingrid Philipsen 11. Intersections on the Back Road: Class, Culture, and Education in Rural and Appalachian Places Van Dempsey 12. Class-Déclassé George W. Noblit List of Contributors Name Index Subject Index
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"…examines issues of class difference across race, gender, and geography to provide an expansive exploration of schooling within changing economic structures." — CHOICE"Sociologists with strong interests in social class and education will definitely want to take a look at this book…" — Teaching Sociology"…one of the most important characteristics of the book … is its attempt to answer the question of 'What is to be done?' By taking seriously the issue of 'emancipatory' pedagogies (the plural is crucial here), [the authors] … are not satisfied with bearing witness to negativity—although this is a crucial act for researchers to engage in. They also want to open the spaces for possible interruption and intervention. As I have argued at length elsewhere, this is one of the more significant roles that critical scholars can play in a time of conservative attacks on everything we hold dear … this is a book that deserves our attention." — from the Foreword by Michael W. Apple"Anyone who reads this volume will find it difficult to deny the many ways in which class can shape and be shaped by the experiences of children in schools. This is a groundbreaking book." — Cynthia Gerstl-Pepin, coauthor of Re-framing Educational Politics for Social Justice
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780791470930
Publisert
2007-04-05
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
644 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
376

Foreword by

Om bidragsyterne

Jane A. Van Galen is Professor of Education at the University of Washington at Bothell and the coeditor (with Deborah Eaker-Rich) of Caring in an Unjust World: Negotiating Borders and Barriers in Schools, also published by SUNY Press. George W. Noblit is Joseph R. Neikirk Distinguished Professor of Sociology of Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His many books include The Social Construction of Virtue: The Moral Life of Schools (coauthored with Van O. Dempsey), also published by SUNY Press.