Living on the Edge: Rethinking Poverty, Class and Schooling, Second Edition confronts one of the most enduring and controversial issues in education-the nexus between poverty and underachievement. This topic stubbornly remains a key contemporary battleground in the struggle to raise standards. Living on the Edge maps and compares a number of competing explanations, critiques inadequate and deficit accounts and offers a more convincing and useful theory. The authors challenge the view that problems can be fixed by discrete initiatives, which in many instances are deeply rooted in deficit views…mehr
Living on the Edge: Rethinking Poverty, Class and Schooling, Second Edition confronts one of the most enduring and controversial issues in education-the nexus between poverty and underachievement. This topic stubbornly remains a key contemporary battleground in the struggle to raise standards. Living on the Edge maps and compares a number of competing explanations, critiques inadequate and deficit accounts and offers a more convincing and useful theory. The authors challenge the view that problems can be fixed by discrete initiatives, which in many instances are deeply rooted in deficit views of youth, families and communities. The book systematically interrogates a range of explanations based outside as well as inside schools. It draws upon positive examples of schools which are succeeding in engaging marginalized young people, providing worthwhile forms of learning and improving young lives. This second edition contains two expansive case studies that exemplify, explain andillustrate the themes coursing through the book. Living on the Edge's second edition remains a "must read" for anyone concerned about or implicated in the struggle for more socially just forms of education.
John Smyth is Visiting Professor of Education and Social Justice at Huddersfield Centre for Research into Education and Society, University of Huddersfield (UK). He is Emeritus Research Professor of Education, Federation University Australia, and Emeritus Professor of Education, Flinders University of South Australia. He is an elected fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, a former Senior Fulbright Research scholar and has received several awards from the American Educational Research Association for his research. His most recent books include The Toxic University: Zombie Leadership, Academic Rock Stars and Neoliberal Ideology (2017), The Socially Just School: Making Space for Youth to Speak Back (2014) and Doing Critical Educational Research: A Conversation with the Research of John Smyth (Peter Lang, 2014). His research interests are in critical policy sociology, social justice and ethnographic forms of research. Terry Wrigley is Visiting Professor at Northumbria University, England, and editor of the international journal Improving Schools. His books include The Power to Learn (2000), Schools of Hope (2003), Another School Is Possible (2006), Changing Schools: Alternative Ways to Make a World of Difference (2012) and Social Justice Re-examined (2012). His research interests are in child poverty, inequality and school policy. Peter McInerney is an independent scholar, former high school teacher and former Research Associate at Federation University Australia. He has authored several books with John Smyth including Becoming Educated: Yong People¿s Narratives of Disadvantage, Class, Place and Identity (Peter Lang, 2014), From Silent Witnesses to Active Agents: Student Voice in Re-engaging with Learning (Peter Lang, 2012), `Hanging in with Kids in Tough Times¿: Engagement in Contexts of Educational Disadvantage in the Relational School (Peter Lang, 2010) and Teachers in the Middle: Reclaiming the Adolescent Years of Schooling (Peter Lang, 2007). His research interests are in forms of school reform that promote social justice.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments - Bob Lingard: Foreword: Putting Those 'Living on the Edge' at the Centre of Educational Policy and Practice - Preface for the Second Edition - Introduction: Living on the Edge: Rethinking Poverty, Class and Schooling - Making Sense of Class - Understanding Poverty in the Twenty-first Century - Material Poverty and 'Problem' Neighborhoods - Blaming Individuals and Blaming Their Genes - Speaking the Wrong Language - Aspirations and "Cultures of Poverty" - Neoliberal School Reform: Blaming Teachers, Blaming Schools - Improving Schools or Transforming Them: The Politics of Social Justice - Poor Kids Need Rich Teaching - "Live on the Edge...Be the Best You Can": An Australian Study of Student-Oriented Curriculum at Plainsville School - "This Is a Bit of a Life Saver for Me": Insights from Stepping Out, an Alternative Education Program for Students "Living on the Edge" in Regional Australia - Conclusion: Schools for Social Justice: Theories of Good Practice - References - Author Index - Subject Index.
Acknowledgments - Bob Lingard: Foreword: Putting Those 'Living on the Edge' at the Centre of Educational Policy and Practice - Preface for the Second Edition - Introduction: Living on the Edge: Rethinking Poverty, Class and Schooling - Making Sense of Class - Understanding Poverty in the Twenty-first Century - Material Poverty and 'Problem' Neighborhoods - Blaming Individuals and Blaming Their Genes - Speaking the Wrong Language - Aspirations and "Cultures of Poverty" - Neoliberal School Reform: Blaming Teachers, Blaming Schools - Improving Schools or Transforming Them: The Politics of Social Justice - Poor Kids Need Rich Teaching - "Live on the Edge...Be the Best You Can": An Australian Study of Student-Oriented Curriculum at Plainsville School - "This Is a Bit of a Life Saver for Me": Insights from Stepping Out, an Alternative Education Program for Students "Living on the Edge" in Regional Australia - Conclusion: Schools for Social Justice: Theories of Good Practice - References - Author Index - Subject Index.
Rezensionen
"Living on the Edge tackles tough issues about class, poverty and justice that are of central importance for teachers, parents, policy-makers-and young people. The book combines clear writing, good scholarship, and firm commitment. Clearing a path through the forest of misleading ideas about educational disadvantage, Smyth and Wrigley show the educational damage done by current market-driven policies and testing systems. Bringing together the experience of creative teachers and schools that work well in tough circumstances, they show how schools can make positive and immediate gains for fairness and good education."-Raewyn Connell, University Chair, Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney
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