How Girls Achieve
English
By (author): Sally A. Nuamah
Winner of the Jackie Kirk Award
Winner of the AESA Critics Choice Award
Blazes new trails in the study of the lives of girls, challenging all of us who care about justice and gender equity not only to create just and inclusive educational institutions but to be unapologetically feminist in doing so. Seamlessly merging research with the stories and voices of girls and those who educate them, this book reminds us that we should do better and inspires the belief that we can. It is the blueprint weve been waiting for.
Brittney C. Cooper, author of Eloquent Rage
Nuamah makes a compelling and convincing case for the development of the type of school that can not only teach girls but also transform themAn essential read for all educators, policymakers, and parents invested in a better future.
Joyce Banda, former President of the Republic of Malawi
This bold and necessary book points out a simple and overlooked truth: most schools never had girls in mind to begin with. That is why the world needs what Sally Nuamah calls feminist schools, deliberately designed to provide girls with achievement-oriented identities. And she shows how these schools would help all students, regardless of their gender.
Educated women raise healthier families, build stronger communities, and generate economic opportunities for themselves and their children. Yet millions of disadvantaged girls never make it to schooland too many others drop out or fail. Upending decades of advice and billions of dollars in aid, Nuamah argues that this happens because so many challenges girls confrontfrom sexual abuse to unequal access to materials and opportunitiesgo unaddressed. But it isnt enough just to go to school. What you learn there has to prepare you for the world where youll put that knowledge to work.
A compelling and inspiring scholar who has founded a nonprofit to test her ideas, Nuamah reveals that developing resilience is not a gender-neutral undertaking. Preaching grit doesnt help girls; it actively harms them. Drawing on her deep immersion in classrooms in the United States, Ghana, and South Africa, Nuamah calls for a new approach: creating feminist schools that will actively teach girls how and when to challenge societys norms, and allow them to carve out their own paths to success.