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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lois Weis (University at Buffalo, SUNY, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.884kg ISBN: 9780415957076ISBN 10: 0415957079 Pages: 390 Publication Date: 13 December 2007 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print 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 ContentsSection 1: Thinking/Living Class 1. Why the Rich are Getting Richer and the Poor, Poorer Robert B. Reich 2. The Continuing Importance of Class Analysis Erik Olin Wright 3. Behind the Gates: Social Splitting and the 'Other' Setha Low 4. The Two-in-Oneness of Class Wendy Luttrell 5. Reflections on Class and Educational Reform Stanley Aronowitz Section 2: Parenting Class 6. Class Out of Place: The White Middle Classes and Intersectionalities of Class and 'Race' in Urban State Schooling in England Diane Reay 7. Class Reproduction and Social Networks in the U.S. Fiona Devine 8. Watching, Waiting, and Deciding When to Intervene: Race, Class, and the Transmission of Advantage Annette Lareau 9. Are Middle-Class Families Advantaging their Children? Kimberly S. Maier, Timothy G. Ford, and Barbara Schneider 10. Parenting Practices and Schooling: The Way Class Works for New Immigrant Groups Guofang Li Section 3: Schooling Class 11. Persisting Social Class Inequality in U.S. Education Adam Gamoran 12. The Social Cost of Inadequate Education of Black Males Henry M. Levin 13. Social Class and School Knowledge Jean Anyon 14. Social Class and Tracking within Schools Sean Patrick Kelly 15. How Class Matters: The Geography of Educational Desire and Despair in Schools and Courts Michelle Fine, April Burns, María Elena Torre and Yasser A. Payne 16. Playing to Middle Class Self-Interest in Pursuit of School Equity Ellen Brantlinger 17. Class, Teachers, and Teacher Education Greg Dimitriadis 18. Social Class and Higher Education: A Reorganization of Opportunities Scott L. Thomas and Angela Bell Section 4: Complicating Class, Race and Gender Intersectionality 19. Towards a Re-Thinking of Class as Nested in Race and Gender: Tracking the White Working Class in the Final Quarter of the Twentieth Century Lois Weis 20. The Ideological Blackening of Hmong American Youth Stacey J. Lee 21. Schools, Social Class and Youth: A Bernsteinian Analysis Alan R. Sadovnik 22. Spatial Containment in the Inner City: Youth Subcultures, Class-Conflict and Geographies of Exclusion Jo-Anne Dillabough, Jacqueline Kennelly and Eugenia Wang 23. Class and the Middle: Schooling, Subjectivity and Social Formation Julie McLeod and Lyn Yates 24. Rereading Class, Rereading Cultural Studies Jennifer Logue and Cameron McCarthyReviews<p> The Way Class Works: Readings on School, Family, and the Economy is a compelling edited volume that explores the often overlooked influence class has on the lives of young people, their outlook, and their future opportunities. -- Fall 2008, Harvard Educational Review <p> Weis (sociology of education, State U. of New York at Buffalo) couples new research and classic pieces on the impact of social class in the arenas of schools, schooling, and family life in the United States. The volume's 24 articles are organized into sections that examine class formation and associated class practices; the ways parenting choices and practices are linked to class formation and associated educational outcomes; links between social class and educational outcomes; and the complex relationship between class, race, and gender. -- Book News Inc., August 2008 <p>The Way Class Works is both an impressive and timely achievement. Weis has pulled together a diverse group of both established and emerging scholars, working from an astonishing array of perspectives, to foster an intricate and crucial dialogue about class. One of the most significant accomplishments of the collection is in the diversity of scholarly traditions represented by the contributors. -- Nadine Dolby, International Studies in Sociology of Education, Vol. 18, Nos. 3-4, September-December 2008 <p>. ..a good reader on how social class differences are made and experienced...Aimed at students, a list of discussion questions is included at the end of each article. The book should also be useful to teachers and scholars as an introduction to many of the best current studies in class and education, pointing to the larger works from which the readings come. -- B. Weston, Centre College <p> The Way Class Works: Readings on School, Family, and the Economy is a compelling edited volume that explores the often overlooked influence class has on the lives of young people, their outlook, and their future opportunities. -- Fall 2008, Harvard Educational Review<p> Weis (sociology of education, State U. of New York at Buffalo) couples new research and classic pieces on the impact of social class in the arenas of schools, schooling, and family life in the United States. The volume's 24 articles are organized into sections that examine class formation and associated class practices; the ways parenting choices and practices are linked to class formation and associated educational outcomes; links between social class and educational outcomes; and the complex relationship between class, race, and gender. -- Book News Inc., August 2008<p>The Way Class Works is both an impressive and timely achievement. Weis has pulled together a diverse group of both established and emerging schol Author InformationLois Weis is State University of New York Distinguished Professor of Sociology of Education at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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