Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
The first edition of What's Race Got to Do With It (2015) addressed a moment when those working on the ground-activists, educators, young people, and families-were trying to understand and fight back against neoliberal education reforms (e.g., high stakes testing, school closings, and charter schools), while uncovering what race had to do with it all in the context of a supposedly post-racial United States. In the years since, the steady and grounded work of social movements has increased the visibility and critique of privatization, market-based reforms, and segregation; demonstrating the…mehr
The first edition of What's Race Got to Do With It (2015) addressed a moment when those working on the ground-activists, educators, young people, and families-were trying to understand and fight back against neoliberal education reforms (e.g., high stakes testing, school closings, and charter schools), while uncovering what race had to do with it all in the context of a supposedly post-racial United States. In the years since, the steady and grounded work of social movements has increased the visibility and critique of privatization, market-based reforms, and segregation; demonstrating the interlocking connections between racism and capitalism. In this period we have also seen an intensified attack on public education (alongside other public infrastructures) and a return to a more overt "racism as we knew it." This new edition of What's Race continues the examination of neoliberal education reforms as they are being rolled back (or reworked) to track the changes and continuities of recent years-revealing the ways in which market-driven education reforms work with and through race-and share grassroots stories of resistance to these reforms. It is hoped that this new edition will continue to sharpen readers' analyses concerning what we are working to defend and what we are working to transform, and provides a guide to action that emboldens the collective struggle for justice.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, D ausgeliefert werden.
Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Autorenporträt
Edwin Mayorga is Assistant Professor of Educational Studies and Latin American/Latinx Studies at Swarthmore College. He is completing his first book, Dominance and Sobrevivencia: The Barrio and Latinx Education in the Midst of Racial Capitalist Urbanism. Ujju Aggarwal is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at The New School. She is completing her first book, The Color of Choice: Raced Rights and the Structure of Citizenship in Education, a historically informed ethnography of choice as it emerged in the post-Civil Rights period in the United States. Bree Picower is Associate Professor at Montclair State University. She is the author of Practice What You Teach: Social Justice Education in the Classroom and the Streets and co-editor of Confronting Racism in Teacher Education: Counternarratives of Critical Practice.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments - Edwin Mayorga/Ujju Aggarwal/Bree Picower: Introduction to the Second Edition - Wayne Au: High-Stakes Testing: A Tool for White Supremacy for Over 100 Years - Edwin Mayorga/Tom Liam Lynch: Data Analytics: Population Racism and the Dangers of "Objective" Educational Data - Brian Jones: Keys to the Schoolhouse: Black Teachers, Education Reform and the Growing Teacher Rebellion - Ujju Aggarwal: School Choice: Raced Rights and Neoliberal Restructuring - David Stovall: Mayoral Control: Reform, Whiteness and Critical Race Analysis of Neoliberal Educational Policy - Pauline Lipman: School Closings: Racial Capitalism, State Violence and Resistance - Terrenda White: Charter Schools: Demystifying Whiteness in a Market of "No Excuses" Charter Schools - Amy Brown: Philanthrocapitalism: Race, Class and the Nonprofit Industrial Complex in a New York City School - Rick Ayers/William Ayers: Afterword: A Letter to the Resistance - About the Editors - About the Contributors - Index.
Acknowledgments - Edwin Mayorga/Ujju Aggarwal/Bree Picower: Introduction to the Second Edition - Wayne Au: High-Stakes Testing: A Tool for White Supremacy for Over 100 Years - Edwin Mayorga/Tom Liam Lynch: Data Analytics: Population Racism and the Dangers of "Objective" Educational Data - Brian Jones: Keys to the Schoolhouse: Black Teachers, Education Reform and the Growing Teacher Rebellion - Ujju Aggarwal: School Choice: Raced Rights and Neoliberal Restructuring - David Stovall: Mayoral Control: Reform, Whiteness and Critical Race Analysis of Neoliberal Educational Policy - Pauline Lipman: School Closings: Racial Capitalism, State Violence and Resistance - Terrenda White: Charter Schools: Demystifying Whiteness in a Market of "No Excuses" Charter Schools - Amy Brown: Philanthrocapitalism: Race, Class and the Nonprofit Industrial Complex in a New York City School - Rick Ayers/William Ayers: Afterword: A Letter to the Resistance - About the Editors - About the Contributors - Index.
Rezensionen
"The editors of What's Race Got To Do With It understood the urgent need for this second edition. They help us make sense of the perils and possibilities of this moment and lay out an essential race-class analysis so we might understand and attack the many-headed hydra of educational injustice today."-Jeanne Theoharis, Distinguished Professor, Brooklyn College of CUNY; Author, A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights History
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826