Reconstructing 'drop-out': A Critical Ethnography of the Dynamics of Black Students' Disengagement from School

Couverture
University of Toronto Press, 1 janv. 1997 - 288 pages

As many as one million untrained youths will enter the Canadian labour market by the year 2000. And yet, 60 per cent of jobs being created in Canada require at least a high school education. The drop-out rate is one of the most crucial issues that Canadian educators face.

Traditionally, we have pinned dropping out on individual failure or specific situations such as pregnancy, substance abuse, and family troubles. The authors of this book suggest that the problem is more complex. Race, class, gender, and other forms of social difference can affect how education is delivered. For Black students, whose drop-out rate is disproportionately high, race is a key element in disengagement. The authors turn to the experiences of Black and non-Black students, teachers, parents, and community workers to try and reconstruct the social, structural, and institutional practices that lead Black youth to lose interest in and leave school.

Based on a three-year study in the greater Toronto area, Reconstructing 'Dropout' establishes a new frame of reference for understanding the dilemma. It is a call for social action and transformation that should not be ignored by researchers, teachers, administrators, and the Black community at large.

 

Table des matières

Research Methodology
31
The Social Construction of a Dropout Dispelling
46
Understanding Student Disengagement
64
Intersections of Race Class and Gender
85
Authority Power and Respect
106
Streaming and Teacher Expectations Social Change
115
Curriculum Content and Connection
137
Framing Issues of Identity and Representation
150
The Colour of Knowledge Confronting Eurocentrism
169
Family Community and Society
189
Visions of Educational and Social Change
199
The Missing Link
220
APPENDICES
255
REFERENCES
269
SUBJECT INDEX
285
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À propos de l'auteur (1997)

George J. Sefa Dei is Professor, Department of Sociology in Education, University of Toronto.

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