Laboring to Learn: Women's Literacy and Poverty in the Post-Welfare Era

Awards:   Winner of <DIV>Awarded the Cyril O. Houle Award for Outstanding Literature in Adult Education, 2009.</DIV> 2009
Author:   Lorna Rivera
Publisher:   University of Illinois Press
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780252075551


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   01 August 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Laboring to Learn: Women's Literacy and Poverty in the Post-Welfare Era


Awards

  • Winner of <DIV>Awarded the Cyril O. Houle Award for Outstanding Literature in Adult Education, 2009.</DIV> 2009

Overview

The American adult education system has become an alternative for school dropouts, with some state welfare policies requiring teen mothers and women without high school diplomas to participate in adult education programs to receive aid. Currently, low-income women of color are more likely to be enrolled in the lowest levels of adult basic education. Very little has been published about women's experiences in these mandatory programs and whether the programs reproduce the conditions that forced women to drop out in the first place. Lorna Rivera bridges the gap with this important study, the product of ten years' active ethnographic research with formerly homeless women who participated in adult literacy education classes before and after welfare reform. She draws on rich interviews with organizers and participants in the Adult Learners Program at Project Hope, a women's shelter and community development organization in Boston's Dudley neighborhood, one of the poorest in the city. Analyzing the web of ideological contradictions regarding ""work first"" welfare reform policies, Rivera argues that poverty is produced and reproduced when women with low literacy skills are pushed into welfare-to-work programs and denied education. She examines how various discourses about individual choice and self-sufficiency shape the purposes of literacy, how low-income women express a sense of personal responsibility for being poor, and how neoliberal ideologies and practices compromise the goals of critical literacy programs. Throughout this study, the voices and experiences of formerly homeless women challenge cultural stereotypes about poor women, showing in personal and structural terms how social and economic forces shape and restrict opportunities for low-income women of color.

Full Product Details

Author:   Lorna Rivera
Publisher:   University of Illinois Press
Imprint:   University of Illinois Press
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.313kg
ISBN:  

9780252075551


ISBN 10:   0252075552
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   01 August 2008
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A vivid, intimate, and sympathetic portrayal of the hardships that the Project Hope women face in attempting to secure affordable housing, in coordinating their child care and their commutes to and from suburban shelters with rigid schedules, and in living with the memory or the present reality of domestic and sexual abuse... A rare window into the street-level practices of adult literacy education--American Journal of Sociology A masterful study documenting the punitive outcome welfare reform has had on low-income women. --Adult Education Quarterly


Given the increasing gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S., there is a desperate need for the kind of scholarship that Laboring to Learn contributes to the field. There is no other text that I have encountered that so forthrightly and effectively engages the literature on adult education, the political economy of poverty, and questions of public policy. Antonia Darder, author of Reinventing Paulo Freire: A Pedagogy of Love


Author Information

Lorna Rivera is an associate professor of sociology and community studies in the College of Public and Community Service at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.

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