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Cutting Class
Socioeconomic Status and Education
Cutting Class
Socioeconomic Status and Education
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Description
In these vivid, thought-provoking essays, leading scholars draw from their own life experiences to explore the ways in which socio-economic class has shaped their lives and educational practices. Some experienced the sting of poverty as students, while others tell stories of a privileged upbringing and moments of epiphany when they recognized the far-reaching effects of class privilege. Many in this volume tell stories of their successful (and not-so-successful) teaching experiences with students from various social classes, providing valuable insights for teachers and other education professionals.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Exploring Critical Theory and Critical Ethnography in the Context of the Production and Reproduction of Social Class
Chapter 3 Class, Race, Space and Unequal Educational Outcomes in the US: Beyond Dichotomies
Chapter 4 Corporate Consciousness and the Failure of Higher Education
Chapter 5 Social Class and Curriculum: Theoretical-Political Possibilities and Practical Matters
Chapter 6 Issues of Class in Urban Science Education
Chapter 7 The Challenge of Equitable Access to Arts and Museum Experiences for LowIncome New York City Schoolchildren
Chapter 8 My Daughter, Myself: Class Reflections through the Parent-Race-Gender Lens
Chapter 9 Readin' Class: Droppin' Out
Chapter 10 July 12, 1977: The Journey to Class Consciousness Begins-A Rural White South Carolina Story
Chapter 11 Poverty of Mind, Poverty of Spirit: Breaking the Shackles that Bind
Chapter 12 Afterword: It's a Class Act
Product details
Published | 12 Jul 2007 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 322 |
ISBN | 9798216344391 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Series | Culture and Education Series |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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In the tradition of George S. Counts but generally without his optimism, Kincheloe and Steinberg have assembled a critique of American schooling. Their title, Cutting Class, is a double entendre reflecting their charge that an educational structure that once made class differences a critical element in understanding students' progress has been dismantled. They argue that this structure was a victim of educational accountability generally, and No Child Left Behind particularly. Considerations of social class, they maintain, have been largely displaced by a focus on ethnic and gender differences, and the result is a system that misses the most important variable to understanding educational progress. Not surprisingly, the material in the chapters reflects the contributors' preference for a qualitative, often ethnographic analysis. There are the obligatory swipes at Murray and Herrnstein, but the result is at least provocative. Philip Anderson's chapter on curriculum and social class is particularly good.
D.E. Tanner, California State University, Fresno