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Chapter 7 Why Can’t Johnny Read?: Education in Crisis
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Chapter Overview Social Problems Faced by Schools Student Impact at Local and National Levels Statistical Portrait of Various Educational Social Problems History of Public Education in U.S. Evolving Roles and Debates Case Studies © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Statistical Portrait of Schools and Social Problems Two major categories of social problems in education: 1. Inequalities and access 2. Kinds of education available © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Dropout Rates U.S. dropout rate 10% U.S. ranked 11 th among industrialized nations for students completing high school degrees Higher among minorities Link between level of education and unemployment Those without high school diploma twice as likely to be unemployed as those with high school diploma © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Social Conditions Related to Dropout Rates Socioeconomic Status of Family Family Structure Family Stress Death Divorce Family moves Mother’s Age © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Inequalities in Education Funding Segregation, Race, and Ethnicity Higher Education © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Funding Public vs. Private Inequality Among and Between Public Schools Salary of teachers Funding per student SAT scores © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Segregation, Race, and Ethnicity Legal Segregation Brown v. Board of Education Desegregation and “Re-segregation” White Flight De Facto Segregation: segregation which occurs not by law but geographic or economic disparity Race and Ethnicity Predictors of School Performance © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Percentage of Black and Latino Students in Predominantly Black and Latino Schools
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Higher Education Class Impacts College Entrance Government Subsidies Race and Ethnicity Affirmative Action © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Native-Born Mexican-Origin and Black Workers, 25- to 34- Year-Old Males, by level of education
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History of Education in the U.S. Colonial Education Public Education Changes in Laws in U.S. Progressive Movement John Dewey Servicemen’s Readjustment Act Civil Rights Acts of 1964 Community Colleges No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Case Study #1: Arizona State University Service Learning and the “Hidden Curriculum” of Poverty © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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ASU’s Project Participants ASU’s Department of English and Writing Across the Curriculum program students and faculty Children in Roosevelt School District (RSD) Action One-on-one tutoring Reading development Educational enrichment workshops Learning readiness programs © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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ASU’s Project Theoretical Significance Conflict theory’s emphasis on the unwritten and indirect played by inequality in teaching poor students that they have unequal opportunities and face almost insurmountable obstacles Hidden curriculum © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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ASU’s Impact Intellectual Impact Witness and engage variety of social problems behind poor academic performance Recognition of complexity those served and conditions in which they live Embrace need to challenge larger structural inequalities Address impact of hidden curriculum on each student © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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ASU’s Impact Cont’d Practical Impact Health screening Nutrition skills Tutoring Learning-based mentoring Boost academic performance Reduce dropout rates © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Case Study #2: Disrupting Education Inequality Through the Futures Project © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Futures Project Participants UCLA’s Department of Education Woodrow Wilson High School James Madison High School Action College and high school faculty mentor high school students to do better in high school and then go on to college © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Futures Project Theoretical Significance Symbolic Interactionism Interactions between school officials, faculty, and students important from perspective of reflective self and social expectations Self-fulfilling prophecy Tracking Conflict Theory Reproduction in classroom of class and cultural inequality © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Futures Project Impact Intellectual Impact Students learned to counter negative label as their skills and self- esteem improved Understanding of system of education Practical Impact Participants graduation rates surpassed comparison group Increased GPAs Many students took AP classes Changed expectations © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Case Study #3: Challenging the Gender Gap in Science and Math Education © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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Mother Caroline Academy and Lasell College Project Participants Mother Caroline Academy (MCA) students Lasell College students and faculty Action A variety of service-related initiatives with MCA which lead to the creation of a feminist-based model of mentoring students © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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MCA and Lasell College Project Theoretical Significance Feminist research paradigm principles important to MCA and Lasell project:
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MCA and Lasell College Project Impact Intellectual Impact Both Lasell and MAC students showed higher interests in math and science Lasell students had a better understanding of impact of social conditions on learning Lasell students gained new insights into impact of economic and gender inequalities © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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MCA and Lasell College Project Impact cont’d Practical Impact Various science projects for seventh grade girls at MCA Small lab at MCA Weekly lab sessions at the college © 2011 Pine Forge Press
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