Learning Privilege

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A01=Adam Howard
academic
affluent
Affluent Students
african
African American Parents
African American Students
African Americans
american
Author_Adam Howard
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Category=JNSP
college
Color Blind Racism
Constructive Social Interactions
educational inequality analysis
elite education research
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic school study
Extracurricular
Fourth Lap
Good Life
GPA
Grade Point Average
Hidden Traditions
High Status Colleges
Highland Heights
identity formation youth
Ideological Operations
Independent Schools
Independent Study
Locker Room
Morning Assembly
Parker Students
Poor Students
preparatory
private school culture
Private School Environment
programs
Reed High
schooling
social class stratification
social reproduction in elite schools
Student Culture
students
success
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415960823
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How can teachers bridge the gap between their commitments to social justice and their day to day practice? This is the question author Adam Howard asked as he began teaching at an elite private school and the question that led him to conduct a six-year study on affluent schooling. Unfamiliar with the educational landscape of privilege and abundance, he began exploring the burning questions he had as a teacher on the lessons affluent students are taught in schooling about their place in the world, their relationships with others, and who they are.

Grounded in an extensive ethnographic account, Learning Privilege examines the concept of privilege itself and the cultural and social processes in schooling that reinforce and regenerate privilege. Howard explores what educators, students and families at elite schools value most in education and how these values guide ways of knowing and doing that both create high standards for their educational programs and reinforce privilege as a collective identity. This book illustrates the ways that affluent students construct their own privilege,not, fundamentally, as what they have, but, rather, as who they are.

Adam Howard is Associate Professor of Education at Hanover College and holds a position on the national faculty of Lesley University Graduate School of Education. He is a former private school teacher and director of a nonprofit organization. He has published numerous articles and papers on social class issues in education, privilege, service-learning, and curriculum theory.

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