Keepin' It Real: School Success Beyond Black and White

Awards:   Runner-up for Society for the Study of Social Problems C. Wright Mills Award 2005. Winner of 2006 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award 2005 C. Wright Mills Award Finalist 2007 Honorable Mention of the ASA Race, Gender, and Class Section's Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award . Winner of 2006 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award 2005 C. Wright Mills Award Finalist 2007 Honorable Mention of the ASA Race, Gender, and Class Section's Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award.
Author:   Prudence L. Carter (Associate Professor in the School of Education, Associate Professor in the School of Education, Stanford University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195325232


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   29 March 2007
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Keepin' It Real: School Success Beyond Black and White


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Awards

  • Runner-up for Society for the Study of Social Problems C. Wright Mills Award 2005.
  • Winner of 2006 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award 2005 C. Wright Mills Award Finalist 2007 Honorable Mention of the ASA Race, Gender, and Class Section's Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award .
  • Winner of 2006 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award 2005 C. Wright Mills Award Finalist 2007 Honorable Mention of the ASA Race, Gender, and Class Section's Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award.

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Full Product Details

Author:   Prudence L. Carter (Associate Professor in the School of Education, Associate Professor in the School of Education, Stanford University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.30cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 16.60cm
Weight:   0.345kg
ISBN:  

9780195325232


ISBN 10:   0195325230
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   29 March 2007
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Preface ; Acknowledgments ; Introduction: Minding the Gap: Race, Ethnicity, Achievement and Cultural Meanings ; 1. Beyond Belief: Acculturation, Accommodation and Non-compliance ; 2. Black Cultural Capital and the Conflicts of Schooling ; 3. Between a Soft and a Hard Place: Gender, Ethnicity, and Culture in the School and at Home ; 4. Next Door Neighbors: The Intersections of Gender & Pan-Minority Identity ; 5. New Heads and Multicultural Navigators: Race, Ethnicity, Poverty & Social Capital ; 6. School Success Has No Color ; Appendix

Reviews

<br>.. .debunks the prevailing perspective that academic disengagement is influenced by student resistance to acting white. Acting White, Carter argues, is used by [African-American and Latino] students for cultural, not academic, reasons and is likely connected to student criticism of ineffectually organized schools that are blind to their social, cultural, and material realities offers educators valuable cultural insight into the role dominant and nondominant cultural repertoires play in the achievement gap. Recommended. --Choice<p><br> This thoughtful and engaging study will change the way many people think about academic disengagement among low-income African American and Latino youths. Based on data from her field research, Prudence L. Carter advances an original and compelling thesis that challenges popular explanations of why some students fail in school while others achieve. Keepin' It Real is an important book. -- William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor<p><br> Those who continue to believe that Black and Latino students do not value education because they regard its pursuit as a form of racial treachery must now contend with Dr. Carter's powerful work. Through her textured and detailed ethnographic analysis of high school students, Carter shows that school success has no color, and that the desire to achieve through education has not died with this generation. For those interested in understanding the complex relationship between racial identity and school performance, this is required reading. --Pedro A. Noguera, author of City Schools and theAmerican Dream<p><br> Keepin' It Real offers fresh insight into the importance of a bicultural or multicultural approach to schooling. Carter's careful analysis of the experiences of low-income black and Latino students reveals marked diversity in their educational strategies and outcomes, and provides an important and timely counter to the oversubscribed to notion th


"""...debunks the prevailing perspective that academic disengagement is influenced by student resistance to ""acting white."" ""Acting White,"" Carter argues, is used by [African-American and Latino] students for cultural, not academic, reasons and is likely connected to student criticism of ineffectually organized schools that are blind to their social, cultural, and material realities offers educators valuable cultural insight into the role dominant and nondominant cultural repertoires play in the achievement gap. Recommended.""--Choice ""This thoughtful and engaging study will change the way many people think about academic disengagement among low-income African American and Latino youths. Based on data from her field research, Prudence L. Carter advances an original and compelling thesis that challenges popular explanations of why some students fail in school while others achieve. Keepin' It Real is an important book.""-- William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor ""Those who continue to believe that Black and Latino students do not value education because they regard its pursuit as a form of racial treachery must now contend with Dr. Carter's powerful work. Through her textured and detailed ethnographic analysis of high school students, Carter shows that school success has no color, and that the desire to achieve through education has not died with this generation. For those interested in understanding the complex relationship between racial identity and school performance, this is required reading.""--Pedro A. Noguera, author of City Schools and the American Dream ""Keepin' It Real offers fresh insight into the importance of a bicultural or multicultural approach to schooling. Carter's careful analysis of the experiences of low-income black and Latino students reveals marked diversity in their educational strategies and outcomes, and provides an important and timely counter to the oversubscribed to notion that these young people equate school success with 'acting white.' A must read for all those working to close the achievement gap.""-- Margaret A. Gibson, author of Accommodation Without Assimilation ""This book highlights the importance of cultural authenticity for minority students, and examines how it influences their relationship with the values they believe are privileged by the schooling system. Carter enriches our understanding of topics that have attracted enormous interest among social scientists. Her book should be widely read because it helps us make sense of how various cultural frameworks contribute to the reproduction of inequality.""-- Michèle Lamont, author of The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration ""Keepin' it Real provides the reader with a very rich description of the processes involved in a student's ability to maneuver between school, where dominant culture reigns, and their own community. Policy makers as well as educations should listen to Carter's call for teachers to become ""multicultural navigators"" Educators, researchers, and policy makers will benefit from undertaking the dynamics described in Keepin' it Real.""--Children, Youth, and Environment ""...debunks the prevailing perspective that academic disengagement is influenced by student resistance to ""acting white."" ""Acting White,"" Carter argues, is used by [African-American and Latino] students for cultural, not academic, reasons and is likely connected to student criticism of ineffectually organized schools that are blind to their social, cultural, and material realities offers educators valuable cultural insight into the role dominant and nondominant cultural repertoires play in the achievement gap. Recommended.""--Choice ""This thoughtful and engaging study will change the way many people think about academic disengagement among low-income African American and Latino youths. Based on data from her field research, Prudence L. Carter advances an original and compelling thesis that challenges popular explanations of why some students fail in school while others achieve. Keepin' It Real is an important book.""--William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor ""Those who continue to believe that Black and Latino students do not value education because they regard its pursuit as a form of racial treachery must now contend with Dr. Carter's powerful work. Through her textured and detailed ethnographic analysis of high school students, Carter shows that school success has no color, and that the desire to achieve through education has not died with this generation. For those interested in understanding the complex relationship between racial identity and school performance, this is required reading.""--Pedro A. Noguera, author of City Schools and the American Dream ""Keepin' It Real offers fresh insight into the importance of a bicultural or multicultural approach to schooling. Carter's careful analysis of the experiences of low-income black and Latino students reveals marked diversity in their educational strategies and outcomes, and provides an important and timely counter to the oversubscribed to notion that these young people equate school success with 'acting white.' A must read for all those working to close the achievement gap.""--Margaret A. Gibson, author of Accommodation Without Assimilation ""This book highlights the importance of cultural authenticity for minority students, and examines how it influences their relationship with the values they believe are privileged by the schooling system. Carter enriches our understanding of topics that have attracted enormous interest among social scientists. Her book should be widely read because it helps us make sense of how various cultural frameworks contribute to the reproduction of inequality.""-- Michèle Lamont, author of The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration ""Keepin' it Real provides the reader with a very rich description of the processes involved in a student's ability to maneuver between school, where dominant culture reigns, and their own community. Policy makers as well as educations should listen to Carter's call for teachers to become ""multicultural navigators"" Educators, researchers, and policy makers will benefit from undertaking the dynamics described in Keepin' it Real.""--Children, Youth, and Environment"


<br>.. .debunks the prevailing perspective that academic disengagement is influenced by student resistance to acting white. Acting White, Carter argues, is used by [African-American and Latino] students for cultural, not academic, reasons and is likely connected to student criticism of ineffectually organized schools that are blind to their social, cultural, and material realities offers educators valuable cultural insight into the role dominant and nondominant cultural repertoires play in the achievement gap. Recommended. --Choice<br> This thoughtful and engaging study will change the way many people think about academic disengagement among low-income African American and Latino youths. Based on data from her field research, Prudence L. Carter advances an original and compelling thesis that challenges popular explanations of why some students fail in school while others achieve. Keepin' It Real is an important book. -- William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears: The Wor


.,. debunks the prevailing perspective that academic disengagement is influenced by student resistance to acting white. Acting White, Carter argues, is used by [African-American and Latino] students for cultural, not academic, reasons and is likely connected to student criticism of ineffectually organized schools that are blind to their social, cultural, and material realities offers educators valuable cultural insight into the role dominant and nondominant cultural repertoires play in the achievement gap. Recommended. --Choice<br> This thoughtful and engaging study will change the way many people think about academic disengagement among low-income African American and Latino youths. Based on data from her field research, Prudence L. Carter advances an original and compelling thesis that challenges popular explanations of why some students fail in school while others achieve. Keepin' It Real is an important book. -- William Julius Wilson, author of When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor<br> Those who continue to believe that Black and Latino students do not value education because they regard its pursuit as a form of racial treachery must now contend with Dr. Carter's powerful work. Through her textured and detailed ethnographic analysis of high school students, Carter shows that school success has no color, and that the desire to achieve through education has not died with this generation. For those interested in understanding the complex relationship between racial identity and school performance, this is required reading. --Pedro A. Noguera, author of City Schools and the American Dream<br> Keepin' It Real offers fresh insight into the importance of abicultural or multicultural approach to schooling. Carter's careful analysis of the experiences of low-income black and Latino students reveals marked diversity in their educational strategies and outcomes, and provides an important and timely counter to the oversubscribed to notion that these young people equate school success with 'acting white.' A must read for all those working to close the achievement gap. -- Margaret A. Gibson, author of Accommodation Without Assimilation<br> This book highlights the importance of cultural authenticity for minority students, and examines how it influences their relationship with the values they believe are privileged by the schooling system. Carter enriches our understanding of topics that have attracted enormous interest among social scientists. Her book should be widely read because it helps us make sense of how various cultural frameworks contribute to the reproduction of inequality. -- Michele Lamont, author of The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration<br> Keepin' it Real provides the reader with a very rich description of the processes involved in a student's ability to maneuver between school, where dominant culture reigns, and their own community. Policy makers as well as educations should listen to Carter's call for teachers to become multicultural navigators Educators, researchers, and policy makers will benefit from undertaking the dynamics described in Keepin' it Real. --Children, Youth, and Environment<br>


Author Information

Prudence L. Carter is Associate Professor in the School of Education at Stanford University. She won the 2006 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award and was a finalist for the 2005 C. Wright Mills Award for Keepin' It Real.

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