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E-book: Power, Culture, and Family-School Relations: Towards Culturally Sustaining Practices

(California State University, Dominguez Hills, USA)
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Power, Culture, and Family–School Relations: Towards Culturally Sustaining Practices explores the extent to which common practices in school-based family outreach advance equity or sustain the status quo in power and cultural relations. Using a rich ethnographic account of a school-based family literacy program in Nebraska, the book unfolds the daily cultural practices of the program so that readers may visualize and contemplate how and if the program serves newcomer and refugee families within the unique context of the New Latine Diaspora. The author draws upon critical theory to showcase how neoliberal and deficit ideologies are at play throughout the different aspects of the program, the influence these ideologies have on the participants, and the tactics used by the caregivers to resist and change the programmatic structures and curriculum to meet their needs. As such, the book invites educators, administrators, and scholars into the nebulous and difficult conversation about how schools, paradoxical entities that often colonize but prospectively liberate, must not just rethink how they work with parents and caregivers but rather dismantle traditional cultural practices that seek to assimilate minoritized families. Showcasing the power of ethnography as a tool which can be used to support educators and scholars to understand cultural elements of family outreach programs on a semiotic level, and how transforming these semiotic building blocks can lead to equitable relationships, it will appeal to scholars and researchers with interests in adult education, social foundations of education, critical ethnography, multilingual Adult Basic Education, and family outreach.



Power, Culture, and Family-School Relations: Towards Culturally Sustaining Practices explores the extent to which common practices in school-based family outreach advance equity or sustain the status quo in power and cultural relations.

Reviews

Power, Culture, and Family-School Relations: Towards Culturally Sustaining Practices raises important questions about well-meaning family outreach efforts and argues for an examination of the power dynamics of family-school relations. It is a must-read for researchers and practitioners seeking to build on the often-ignored cultural wealth of immigrant families.

Guadalupe Valdés, Professor Emerita, Stanford University

In her critical ethnographic study of a school-based family outreach program, Stacy breaks new ground in the field of family literacy. This is a must-read for educators, teacher educators, and administrators, particularly those seeking to create culturally sustaining family literacy programs.

Cathy Amanti, Retired Faculty, Georgia State University, USA

In this book, Dr. Jen Stacy carefully examines the world of family literacy. Through her ethnographic study of one public school-sponsored family literacy program in Nebraska, she skillfully demonstrates the perils of the interventionist, deficit-based approach that is most often used in this field. She provides an in-depth introduction to the field, unveils the influence of neoliberalism, and shows how mothers in the program took agentive action to get their needs met. This text is a must-read for anyone wanting to ensure that schools are true partners with immigrant and refugee families in ways that are empowering rather than infantilizing.

Jessica Sierk, Associate Professor, St. Lawrence University, USA

Dr. Jen Stacy delivers an incisive, at times scathing, but candid and necessary critical analysis of neoliberal family literacy programs enmeshed with border theory that frequently divest families of their ways knowing and ancestral teachings to gain the promised rewards of parent engagement. Most notably, this thoughtful critical ethnographic examination of the cultural innerworkings of one family literacy program ultimately suggests ways to co-create culturally sustaining programs with parents as partners and upend extant power dynamics and assimilationist ideologies to center liberatory praxis.

Yesenia Fernández, Associate Professor and Former K-12 District Administrator, California State University Dominguez Hills, USA

1. Family Literacy in the New Latine Diaspora
2. Family Literacy
Borders: Foundation to Clandestine Intervention
3. Neoliberal Entanglement:
Dehumanizing Best Practices
4. Caregiver Resistance: Tactics for Subversion
5. Multilingualism, Multiliteracies, and Missed Opportunities
6. Critical
Family-School Relations: Towards Culturally Sustaining Practices Appendix A:
Open-Ended Ethnographic Interview Protocols
Jen Stacy is an Assistant Professor in Family and Child Studies in the College of Education and Human Sciences at the University of New Mexico, USA.