Introduction |
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1 | (8) |
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PART ONE COUNTERSTORIES: INSIDERS' VIEWS ON POVERTY AND SCHOOLING |
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9 | (2) |
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2 On Lilacs, Tap-Dancing, and Children of Poverty |
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11 | (4) |
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3 Class, Race, and the Hidden Curriculum of Schools |
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15 | (8) |
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4 How School Taught Me I Was Poor |
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23 | (4) |
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5 The Places Where We Live and Learn Mementos From a Working-Class Life |
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27 | (6) |
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33 | (5) |
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7 Low-Income, Urban Youth Speaking Up About Public Education |
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38 | (13) |
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PART TWO IDENTIFYING THE "PROBLEM": FROM A DEFICIT VIEW TO A RESILIENCY VIEW |
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51 | (5) |
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9 On Grifters, Research, and Poverty |
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56 | (4) |
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10 There Really Is a Culture of Poverty Notes on Black Working-Class Struggles for Equity and Education |
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60 | (15) |
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11 Way Down Yonder in the Pawpaw Patch Resiliency in Appalachian Poverty |
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75 | (11) |
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12 Mending at the Seams The Working-Class Threads That Bind Us |
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86 | (8) |
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13 "Student Teachers" What I Learned From Students in a High-Poverty Urban High School |
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94 | (8) |
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14 The Poor Are Not the Problem Class Inequality and the Blame Game |
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102 | (13) |
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PART THREE MAKING CLASS INEQUITY VISIBLE |
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15 blissful abyss or how to look good while ignoring poverty |
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115 | (2) |
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Tricia Gallagher-Geurtsen |
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16 The Great Equalizer? Poverty, Reproduction, and How Schools Structure Inequality |
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117 | (14) |
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17 A Pedagogy of Openness Queer Theory as a Tool for Class Equity |
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131 | (4) |
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135 | (12) |
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Sherrie Fernandez-Williams |
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19 "Who Are You to Judge Me?" What We Can Learn From Low-Income, Rural Early School Leavers |
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147 | (9) |
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20 Looking Past the School Door Children and Economic Injustice |
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156 | (13) |
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PART FOUR INSISTING ON EQUITY: STUDENTS, PARENTS, AND COMMUNITIES FIGHT FOR JUSTICE |
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169 | (2) |
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22 Traversing the Abyss Addressing the Opportunity Gap |
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171 | (12) |
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23 Fostering Wideawakeness Third-Grade Community Activists |
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183 | (12) |
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24 Parents, Organized Creating Conditions for Low-Income Immigrant Parent Enagement in Public Schools |
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195 | (12) |
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25 Challenging Class-Based Assumptions Low-Income Families' Perceptions of Family Involvement |
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207 | (14) |
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PART FIVE TEACHING FOR CLASS EQUITY AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE |
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221 | (2) |
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223 | (7) |
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28 Insisting on Class(room) Equality in Schools |
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230 | (11) |
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29 Cultivating Economic Literacy and Social Well-Being An Equity Perspective |
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241 | (13) |
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30 Becoming Upstanders Humanizing Faces of Poverty Using Literature in a Middle School Classroom |
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254 | (8) |
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31 Literacy Learning and Class Issues A Rationale for Resisting Classism and Deficit Thinking |
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262 | (11) |
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32 Imagining an Equity Pedagogy for Students in Poverty |
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273 | (16) |
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PART SIX POVERTY, EDUCATION, AND THE TROUBLE WITH SCHOOL "REFORM" |
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289 | (2) |
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34 The Teach For America Story From a Voice of Dissent |
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291 | (9) |
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35 "Do You Have Fidelity to the Program?" Matters of Faith in a Restructured Title I Middle School |
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300 | (11) |
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36 The Inequity Gap of Schooling and the Poverty of School "Reform" |
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311 | (13) |
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37 Homage to Teachers in High-Poverty Schools |
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324 | (4) |
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38 Questioning Educational "Reform" and the Imposition of a National Curriculum |
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328 | (11) |
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39 Local Education Foundations and the Private Subsidizing of Public Education |
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339 | (10) |
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About the Editors and Contributors |
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349 | (4) |
Index |
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353 | |