Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban ClassroomsP. Lang, 2005 - 185 páginas Researchers and theorists are calling for more research that considers the interaction of race, class, and gender in urban education research and practice. Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms is the first book to directly focus on the pedagogical and educational needs of poor and working-class African American female students. Blurring the boundaries between research, theory, and practice, Teaching Black Girls offers teachers and educational advocates an alternative lens to approach positive educational development in urban schools. Using data from a three-year ethnography, this book explores ways in which teachers and educational institutions can foster resilience in students who acquire many risks and vulnerabilities in a society that privileges whiteness, wealth, and men. The author merges the tenets of postmodernism, Black feminism, and critical pedagogy to offer insight into the learning dynamics of students who may encounter multiple adversities in the home, community, and school. |
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Página 9
... male experi- ence ) , or simply pathologized . The history of the study of Black girls has a cy- clical pattern of ... males , Black females have fewer behavior prob- lems . African American girls ' behaviors are least likely to affect ...
... male experi- ence ) , or simply pathologized . The history of the study of Black girls has a cy- clical pattern of ... males , Black females have fewer behavior prob- lems . African American girls ' behaviors are least likely to affect ...
Página 153
... male pupil , and the teachers ' actions may never be questioned , because such actions are becoming the norm in many public urban schools . Of course , teachers do not rid their classrooms of all the males , but they may have elimi ...
... male pupil , and the teachers ' actions may never be questioned , because such actions are becoming the norm in many public urban schools . Of course , teachers do not rid their classrooms of all the males , but they may have elimi ...
Página 162
... male teachers implement gender- and cultural - specific programs that target Black girls ? White women can definitely be a part of such a program as long as the students ' topics of interest are addressed and the students are ...
... male teachers implement gender- and cultural - specific programs that target Black girls ? White women can definitely be a part of such a program as long as the students ' topics of interest are addressed and the students are ...
Contenido
Engendering Resiliency in Urban Education | 23 |
The Construction of Social Inequality | 49 |
Introducing the CoNarrators | 79 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms Venus E. Evans-Winters Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms Venus E. Evans-Winters Sin vista previa disponible - 2011 |
Términos y frases comunes
achievement Acme Corporation adolescents adult affected African American children African American female African American girls African American teachers ain't American female students and/or asked behavior believe Black community Black feminism church classism classroom critical pedagogy cultural cultural-specific dents economic educational development educational experiences educational research educational resiliency environment epistemology ethnography example female caregivers foster Furthermore gender ghetto grade grandmother Haven high school identity important individual inequality institutional racism interview JROTC lives look low-income mentor meritocracy metanarratives middle school minority mother neighborhood Nicole Nicole's oppression participants pedagogy peers political postmodernism programs racial racism relationships resilient students school experiences school resiliency segregated sexism simply social stories stress stressors stuff talk Teaching Black Girls Terry theory tion tional tutor U.S. Census Bureau U.S. Constitution understand urban education urban girls urban students White young women Yssis Zora Zora's