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Reauthoring Savage Inequalities: Narratives of Community Cultural Wealth in Urban Educational Environments [Hardback]

Edited by , Edited by , Afterword by , Edited by , Foreword by , Edited by
  • Formāts: Hardback, 361 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x25 mm, weight: 608 g, 4 Tables, black and white; 1 Figures; 6 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : SUNY series, Critical Race Studies in Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2023
  • Izdevniecība: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-10: 1438492901
  • ISBN-13: 9781438492902
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 361 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x25 mm, weight: 608 g, 4 Tables, black and white; 1 Figures; 6 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : SUNY series, Critical Race Studies in Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2023
  • Izdevniecība: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-10: 1438492901
  • ISBN-13: 9781438492902
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Reauthoring Savage Inequalities brings together scholars, educators, practitioners, and students to counter dominant narratives of urban educational environments. Using a community cultural wealth lens, contributors center the strategies, actions, and ways of knowing communities of color use to resist systemic oppression. So often, discussions of urban schooling are filled with stories of what Jonathan Kozol famously referred to as "savage inequalities" in his 1991 book of the same title—with tales of deficiency and despair. The counternarratives in this volume grapple with the inequalities highlighted by Kozol. Yet, in foregrounding lived experiences of educating and being educated in schools and communities that were systemically isolated and disenfranchised then and continue to be thirty years later, Reauthoring Savage Inequalities brings nuance to depictions of teaching and learning in urban areas. In nineteen essays, as well as commentaries, a foreword, and an afterword, contributors engage readers in critical dialogue about the importance of community cultural wealth. They identify the sources of support that enable students, staff, parents, and community members to succeed and thrive despite the purposeful divestment in communities of color across this nation's cities.

Offers rich, wide-ranging counternarratives to social, political, and educational discourses that characterize urban schools and communities as places of despair, revealing the resources and strategies of resistance that teachers, students, and families use to succeed and thrive.

Recenzijas

"Reauthoring Savage Inequalities is groundbreaking, timely, and exquisite. It is both a response to Kozol's scholarship and a call to do research differently. In Savage Inequalities, Kozol exposes a particular deficit-driven narrative that plagues urban education. It depicts hopelessness and victimization. But what happens when insiders shape our understanding of education, oppression, and liberation? A fuller, richer, more complicated rendering begins to emerge. This edited volume draws us away from the narrow gaze of white interlocutors and exposes the fragility of scholarship saturated with whiteness and Eurocentricity. Reauthoring Savage Inequalities is what research becomes when you don't merely study the community but serves its people. When you are them and they are you. This kind of kinship leads us to grander validity and deeper answersnot merely in our findings related to urban education but in our work as human beings." Vajra M. Watson, author of Transformative Schooling: Towards Racial Equity in Education

Papildus informācija

Offers rich, wide-ranging counternarratives to social, political, and educational discourses that characterize urban schools and communities as places of despair, revealing the resources and strategies of resistance that teachers, students, and families use to succeed and thrive.
Foreword iii
William T. Trent
Introduction 1(8)
Lori D. Patton
Ishwanzya D. Rivers
Raquel L. Farmer-Hinton
Joi D. Lewis
Part 1 Resilience, Wholeness, and Thriving in Urban Schools (Self)
Chapter 1 Peering Back in a Press Forward: Critiques of Educational Equality that Protect White Innocence
9(14)
Chayla Haynes
Chapter 2 Displaced Equalities: Exploring the Impact of Place on Urban Students
23(12)
Jada Renee Koushik
Chapter 3 Persisting through Life as a Result of My Urban Education: The Making of a Black Male Professor
35(22)
Omari Jackson
Guest Commentary and Reflection: We Know Best What Tools and Resources Will Sustain Us
49(8)
Dorinda J. Carter Andrews
Part 2 The Urban Community as Educator (Community)
Chapter 4 Chicago's Other Children
57(10)
Mirelsie Velazquez
Chapter 5 Far from Savage: (Re)Turning to My Village and Revealing the "Two Worlds of Washington"
67(12)
Steve D. Mobley Jr.
Chapter 6 A Third-World City: An Autoethnography on Growing Up in Detroit, Michigan, and Becoming a Teacher
79(24)
Amber C. Bryant
Guest Commentary and Reflection: The Complexity and Nuances of Origin Stories
93(10)
Marvin Lynn
Part 3 Centering Students in Teaching and Learning (Students)
Chapter 7 "People Don't Really Know Camden High": Student Perspectives on their Negatively Viewed High School
103(16)
Keith Benson
Deliyah Whetstone
Tina Q. Baker
Merv Ragsdale
T'emon'et Elliot
Joel Tarte
Dwyane Cooke
Naima Battle
Ajianna Bailey
Joselyn Chevere
Rasheed Pollard
Ijshanna Martin
Brene' Troutman
Chapter 8 No Excuses: Believing and Achieving
119(22)
Jane Bean-Folkes
Susan Browne
Chanelle Rose
Chapter 9 Avenues to Organic Engagement: One Counselor-Educator's Experiences Working with Community Agencies to Promote Educational Success in an Urban Community
141(30)
Ahmad R. Washington
Guest Commentary and Reflection: There's More to the Story: Counter-Narrating Urban Failure and Success
161(10)
Noelle W. Arnold
Part 4 Reflections on Educator and Institutional Influences (Educators)
Chapter 10 Fictive Kin as Driving Forces for Academic Success in Detroit: Black Women's Narratives on Successfully Navigating through College
171(20)
Diane Fuselier-Thompson
Ezella McPherson
Carly Braxton
Chapter 11 "Old School" Urban Education: How Friends, Families, Communities, and Teachers Support Success in Early Childhood
191(10)
Theresa J. Canada
Chapter 12 "I Have Seen the Mountaintop": Intersectionality and the Auto-ethnography of a Mediocre Student at a Gifted School
201(10)
Heather Moore Roberson
Chapter 13 Dispelling the Myth of Despair and Hopelessness: How Ethical Leadership Creates a Counter-Narrative to Kozol's Leadership Caricature
211(20)
Lonnie R. Morris Jr.
Maceo A. Cooper-Jenkins
Guest Commentary and Reflection: Same Place, Different Race
H. Rich Milner
Part 5 Renarrativizing "Home" (Place)
Chapter 14 And Still We Made It: Counter-Narratives of Success, Educational Attainment, and Opportunity in Atlanta
231(14)
Brittany M. Williams
Lyntoria Newton
Chapter 15 In Search of Oz: Culture, Education, and Counter-Narratives of Inequity in Southern Colored Schools
245(22)
Toby S. Jenkins
Chapter 16 Bringing the Love Back Home: An Ode to the Wiz and Growing Up in East St. Louis
267(16)
Jodi L. Jordan
Deborah J. Patton
Lori D. Patton
Guest Commentary and Reflection: Emerald City, Oz, and Savage Inequalities in Education: Centering the Ruby Slippers
277(6)
Theodorea Berry
Part 6 Sunday Dinners with Love
Chapter 17 The Meaning of Sunday Dinners
283(6)
Raquel L. Farmer-Hinton
Chapter 18 East St Louis: Where Our Black Lives Always Mattered
289(14)
Dallas Jewell Watson
Joi D. Lewis
Chapter 19 We Were Always a Community: Cooking, Eating, and Living in the John DeShields Housing Project
303(10)
Ishwanzya D. Rivers
Guest Commentary and Reflection: "You Can't Keep Telling Us What We Already Know": A Fugitive End to Educational Narratives of Tragedy
309(4)
David Stovall
Afterword 313(4)
Tara Yosso
Contributors 317(12)
Index 329
Lori D. Patton is Professor of Higher Education and Student Affairs and Chair for the Department of Educational Studies at The Ohio State University. Ishwanzya D. Rivers is Assistant Professor in the Department of Educational Leadership, Evaluation, and Organizational Development at the University of Louisville. Raquel L. Farmer-Hinton is Associate Professor in the Department of Educational Policy and Community Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Joi D. Lewis is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Joi Unlimited and the Founder and President of Healing Justice Foundation.