Gender, Race, and the Politics of Role Modelling: The Influence of Male Teachers

Author:   Wayne Martino (University of Western Ontario, London, Canada) ,  Goli Rezai-Rashti (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415744270


Pages:   286
Publication Date:   08 November 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Gender, Race, and the Politics of Role Modelling: The Influence of Male Teachers


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Full Product Details

Author:   Wayne Martino (University of Western Ontario, London, Canada) ,  Goli Rezai-Rashti (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780415744270


ISBN 10:   041574427
Pages:   286
Publication Date:   08 November 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Male Teacher Shortage and the Politics of Representation 3. Black Teachers’ Narratives About Role Modelling and Representation 4. Beyond Race-Role Modelling: Black Male Teachers as Organic Intellectuals 5. The Question of Male Privilege 6. The Scourge of Repressive Female Authority 7. The Case of Male Bonding and the Demonization of Female Teachers 8. The Lure of Hegemonic Masculinity for Male Elementary School Teachers 9. The Politics of Multiculturalism, Representation and Role Modelling in a Multi-Racial Muslim School Community 10. Do the Gender and Race of Teachers Really Matter? Students’ Perspectives on Role Modelling 11. Conclusion: Towards a Social Imaginary Beyond Role Modelling

Reviews

""Not since William F. Pinar’s highly original The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America has a book offered a more audacious and intellectually rigorous analysis of the volatile intersection of gender and race in education. What distinguishes Martino and Rezai-Rashti’s book is a relentless commitment to critical empiricism and grounded theory. What the reader will find in Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a refreshing refusal of the easy dogmatism that mars a lot of contemporary writing on gender and racial inequality in education. Theoretical insight on race and gender inequality in schooling is at every point well-earned and connected to empirically supportable inferences. Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a methodologically innovative and theoretically sophisticated book – a long overdue and empirically-informed intervention into an area of curriculum and pedagogical practice that has been kept at arm’s-length by both mainstream and radical education scholars."" – Cameron McCarthy, Director of Global Studies and Education at the University of Illinois-Urbana ""This book is a 'must read' for anyone wondering whether boys do better at school if taught by men teachers. The authors explode the myths around male teachers as role models in a scholarly but hugely readable way. In this book we hear the voices of teachers themselves and the boys and girls they work with. We learn that it is not only gender but also sexuality, race and ethnicity that shape teachers’ lives and professional interactions with students. Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Reshati have used their considerable knowledge and understanding of gender, race and the politics around ‘role modelling’ to offer more reliable and nuanced understandings of teachers’ lives than popularist assumptions suggest."" – Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education, University of Birmingham UK ""Everybody knows that boys need good male role models and that the current 'crisis' of boys in schools is caused, in part, by the shortage of male teachers, especially at the lower grades. Unfortunately, as Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Rashti show in this thoughtful book, what 'everybody knows' turns out not to be true at all! Based on compelling empirical research, rather than stereotypic assumptions, Martino and Rezai-Rashti reframe the debate about boys in school, and thus finally point the way to a national conversation about the right issues. This modest empirical study is revolutionary in its implications."" – Michael Kimmel, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Sociology, author of GUYLAND


Not since William F. Pinar's highly original The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America has a book offered a more audacious and intellectually rigorous analysis of the volatile intersection of gender and race in education. What distinguishes Martino and Rezai-Rashti's book is a relentless commitment to critical empiricism and grounded theory. What the reader will find in Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a refreshing refusal of the easy dogmatism that mars a lot of contemporary writing on gender and racial inequality in education. Theoretical insight on race and gender inequality in schooling is at every point well-earned and connected to empirically supportable inferences. Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a methodologically innovative and theoretically sophisticated book - a long overdue and empirically-informed intervention into an area of curriculum and pedagogical practice that has been kept at arm's-length by both mainstream and radical education scholars. - Cameron McCarthy, Director of Global Studies and Education at the University of Illinois-Urbana This book is a 'must read' for anyone wondering whether boys do better at school if taught by men teachers. The authors explode the myths around male teachers as role models in a scholarly but hugely readable way. In this book we hear the voices of teachers themselves and the boys and girls they work with. We learn that it is not only gender but also sexuality, race and ethnicity that shape teachers' lives and professional interactions with students. Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Reshati have used their considerable knowledge and understanding of gender, race and the politics around `role modelling' to offer more reliable and nuanced understandings of teachers' lives than popularist assumptions suggest. - Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education, University of Birmingham UK Everybody knows that boys need good male role models and that the current 'crisis' of boys in schools is caused, in part, by the shortage of male teachers, especially at the lower grades. Unfortunately, as Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Rashti show in this thoughtful book, what 'everybody knows' turns out not to be true at all! Based on compelling empirical research, rather than stereotypic assumptions, Martino and Rezai-Rashti reframe the debate about boys in school, and thus finally point the way to a national conversation about the right issues. This modest empirical study is revolutionary in its implications. - Michael Kimmel, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Sociology, author of GUYLAND


Not since William F. Pinar's highly original The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America has a book offered a more audacious and intellectually rigorous analysis of the volatile intersection of gender and race in education. What distinguishes Martino and Rezai-Rashti's book is a relentless commitment to critical empiricism and grounded theory. What the reader will find in Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a refreshing refusal of the easy dogmatism that mars a lot of contemporary writing on gender and racial inequality in education. Theoretical insight on race and gender inequality in schooling is at every point well-earned and connected to empirically supportable inferences. Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a methodologically innovative and theoretically sophisticated book - a long overdue and empirically-informed intervention into an area of curriculum and pedagogical practice that has been kept at arm's-length by both mainstream and radical education scholars. - Cameron McCarthy, Director of Global Studies and Education at the University of Illinois-Urbana This book is a 'must read' for anyone wondering whether boys do better at school if taught by men teachers. The authors explode the myths around male teachers as role models in a scholarly but hugely readable way. In this book we hear the voices of teachers themselves and the boys and girls they work with. We learn that it is not only gender but also sexuality, race and ethnicity that shape teachers' lives and professional interactions with students. Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Reshati have used their considerable knowledge and understanding of gender, race and the politics around 'role modelling' to offer more reliable and nuanced understandings of teachers' lives than popularist assumptions suggest. - Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education, University of Birmingham UK Everybody knows that boys need good male role models and that the current 'crisis' of boys in schools is caused, in part, by the shortage of male teachers, especially at the lower grades. Unfortunately, as Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Rashti show in this thoughtful book, what 'everybody knows' turns out not to be true at all! Based on compelling empirical research, rather than stereotypic assumptions, Martino and Rezai-Rashti reframe the debate about boys in school, and thus finally point the way to a national conversation about the right issues. This modest empirical study is revolutionary in its implications. - Michael Kimmel, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Sociology, author of GUYLAND


Not since William F. Pinar's highly original The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America has a book offered a more audacious and intellectually rigorous analysis of the volatile intersection of gender and race in education. What distinguishes Martino and Rezai-Rashti's book is a relentless commitment to critical empiricism and grounded theory. What the reader will find in Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a refreshing refusal of the easy dogmatism that mars a lot of contemporary writing on gender and racial inequality in education. Theoretical insight on race and gender inequality in schooling is at every point well-earned and connected to empirically supportable inferences. Gender, Race and the Politics of Role Modeling: The Influence of Male Teachers is a methodologically innovative and theoretically sophisticated book - a long overdue and empirically-informed intervention into an area of curriculum and pedagogical practice that has been kept at arm's-length by both mainstream and radical education scholars. - Cameron McCarthy, Director of Global Studies and Education at the University of Illinois-Urbana This book is a 'must read' for anyone wondering whether boys do better at school if taught by men teachers. The authors explode the myths around male teachers as role models in a scholarly but hugely readable way. In this book we hear the voices of teachers themselves and the boys and girls they work with. We learn that it is not only gender but also sexuality, race and ethnicity that shape teachers' lives and professional interactions with students. Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Reshati have used their considerable knowledge and understanding of gender, race and the politics around 'role modelling' to offer more reliable and nuanced understandings of teachers' lives than popularist assumptions suggest. - Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education, University of Birmingham UK Everybody knows that boys need good male role models and that the current 'crisis' of boys in schools is caused, in part, by the shortage of male teachers, especially at the lower grades. Unfortunately, as Wayne Martino and Goli Rezai-Rashti show in this thoughtful book, what 'everybody knows' turns out not to be true at all! Based on compelling empirical research, rather than stereotypic assumptions, Martino and Rezai-Rashti reframe the debate about boys in school, and thus finally point the way to a national conversation about the right issues. This modest empirical study is revolutionary in its implications. - Michael Kimmel, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Sociology, author of GUYLAND


Author Information

Wayne Martino is Professor of Education in the Faculty of Education at The University of Western Ontario, Canada. Goli Rezai-Rashti is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at The University of Western Ontario, Canada.

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