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Schools As Radical Sanctuaries Ren Antropgonzlez

  • SKU: BELL-47833562
Schools As Radical Sanctuaries Ren Antropgonzlez
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Schools As Radical Sanctuaries Ren Antropgonzlez instant download after payment.

Publisher: Information Age Pub Incorporated
File Extension: PDF
File size: 27.05 MB
Pages: 117
Author: René Antrop-González
ISBN: 9781617355929, 9781617355912, 1617355925, 1617355917
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

Schools As Radical Sanctuaries Ren Antropgonzlez by René Antrop-gonzález 9781617355929, 9781617355912, 1617355925, 1617355917 instant download after payment.

A volume in Issues in Urban Education Series Editors Denise E. Armstrong, Brock University and Brenda J. McMahon, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Large, comprehensive urban high schools were designed and constructed with the belief that they could meet the needs of all its students, academic and otherwise. By and large, however, these schools have only done a good job of sorting students for specific jobs in a society based on capitalism and White supremacy. Consequently, students schooled in these large institutions are often sorted depending on how they are situated and/or perceived by institutional agents (i.e. teachers, administrators, guidance counselors, and other staff) along racial/ethnic, class, gender, sexual orientation, and ability lines. The overall result of such structurally and culturally-based discriminatory practices has led to astronomically horrendous dropout/pushout rates among urban youth, particularly those of color who live in poverty. However, in such a sea of despair, there exist islands of hope and miracles. These islands of hope and miracles are constituted of small high schools that have become sanctuaries for their students, their families, and communities of color. Moreover, not only do these school sanctuaries exist, but they have the potential to serve as inspirations to communities that are looking to the small schools initiative as a possible solution to the widespread failure of large, comprehensive high schools to serve their needs. Although much recent small schools research discusses the benefits of smallness, very little of this research demonstrates or acknowledges the various ways in which communities have created small schools that have established the necessary conditions to make them sustainable, culturally relevant, and linked to social justice while greatly impacting the improved academic achievement of their students. Therefore, the focus of this book is to advance the school as radical sanctuary concept as d

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