Race
in the Schoolyard
Price: $22.95
Subtitle: Negotiating the Color Line in
Classrooms and Communities
Author: Amanda E. Lewis
Subject: Racial Studies/Education/Family
and Childhood studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3225-6
Pages: 288 pp.
Series: Series
in Childhood Studies
View the table of contents for Race in the Schoolyard
Read an excerpt from Race in the Schoolyard
Description: An exploration of how
race is explicitly and implicitly handled in school
Meyers Outstanding Book Award, 2004
Praise for Race in the Schoolyard
"Race in the Schoolyard is a wonderful book for social
scientists studying race, education, and childhood studies. The book
showcases the talents of a gifted fieldworker whose theoretically rich
work sits on the cutting edge of a growing body of scholarship
examining the social worlds of children. School officials, parents,
and, most especially, a new generation of teachers will benefit from
these lessons on race."-American Journal of Sociology
"Instructors may recommend this book to students to whom the
topic is surely vital and engrossing and for whom the text will be
lively and engaging."-Contemporary Sociology
"Lewis moves beyond traditional research methods used to
examine achievement gaps and differences in test scores to look closely
at the realities of schooling. I highly recommend this work for every
person involved in teaching and learning."-Multicultural Review
"Through eloquent case studies of three California elementary
schools-a white-majority 'good' school, a mostly minority 'tough'
school, and an integrated 'alternative' school-[Lewis] demonstrates
that schools promote racial inequalities through their daily rituals
and practices. Even the notion of a "color-blind" America-an especially
popular ideal in the white school-perpetuates racism, Lewis argues,
because it denies or dismisses the very real constraints that schools
place on minorities. Lewis is nevertheless an optimist, insisting that
schools can change ideas of race. . . . Highly recommended.
Undergraduate collections and above."-Choice
"In this pioneering ethnography in elementary schools, Lewis
shows brilliantly how racism is taught and learned in the small places
of everyday life."-Joe Feagin, University of Florida and author of Racist
America
"A wonderful and timely book. Ethnographically rich,
theoretically sophisticated, and clearly written, this book addresses
the ubiquitous issue of race in all its complexity."-Michèle
Foster, author of Black Teachers on Teaching
"A compelling ethnography of the racial landscape of
contemporary schools."-Barrie Thorne, author of Gender Play: Girls
and Boys in School
Could your kids be learning a fourth R at school:
reading, writing, 'rithmatic, and race?
Race in the Schoolyard takes us to a place most of us
seldom get to see in action¾
our children's classrooms¾ and
reveals the lessons about race that are communicated there. Amanda E.
Lewis spent a year observing classes at three elementary schools, two
multiracial urban and one white suburban. While race of course is not
officially taught like multiplication and punctuation, she finds that
it nonetheless insinuates itself into everyday life in schools.
Lewis explains how the curriculum, both expressed and hidden,
conveys many racial lessons. While teachers and other school community
members verbally deny the salience of race, she illustrates how it does
influence the way they understand the world, interact with each other,
and teach children. This eye-opening text is important reading for
educators, parents, and scholars alike.
Amanda E. Lewis is an assistant professor of sociology
and African American studies and a fellow at the Institute for Research
on Race and Public Policy at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
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Price: $22.95
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