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Learning to Succeed: The Challenges and Possibilities of Educational Achievement for All
George J Sefa Dei
Learning to Succeed: The Challenges and Possibilities of Educational Achievement for All
George J Sefa Dei
Publisher Marketing: George J. Sefa Dei brings his extensive research experience in the Euro-American school system to this book, in which the reader is invited share in the dialogue about the links between the accounts of 'high academic achieving students and their successes'. Stories are presented about their world views and their everyday experiences of what it means to be a student, to be engaged and to succeed in school. Through these discussions, the book shows how the different accounts of students reflect their everyday identities and social realities. The reality of learners is reflected in how they make sense of the world, including through interactions with peers, educators and others they encounter in their educational journey. While research interviews show that some students uncritically embrace dominant notions of success, a number of those marginalized by the school system and society at large understand the subtext of their world, which creates a position of power and allows the subaltern voice of difference to fuel educational change. This book argues that a critical analysis and understanding of academic achievement must be contextual, and be able to point to the uniqueness and connectedness of students' experiences. Our discursive analysis can never lose sight of race and social difference as powerful explanatory variables in understanding the educational experiences of diverse youth in the Euro-American schooling system. This book goes beyond the symphony of race and power to examine the intersections of social difference: social class, gender, sexuality, ability, language, religion, and so forth, in coming to know about students' excellence and failures. It appears that even the much touted successful students who excel, can be disengaged, and there are significant race, class, gender and class disparities in such successes as well. This book brings to the forefront the need to bring a complex reading to our understandings of student success, across lines of difference and as well, over time, in order to understand the processes of student disengagement. Further, this study argues that we must conceive of [dis]engagement as a dialogical process wrapped up in the relationship between agency and structure. This implies that a student cannot disengage alone. The agentive capacity to do so cannot be divorced from the sometimes clandestine structural imperatives to reject formal education. Contributor Bio: Dei, George J Sefa George J. Sefa Dei is Professor, Department of Sociology in Education, University of Toronto.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | May 8, 2010 |
ISBN13 | 9781934844137 |
Publishers | Teneo Press |
Pages | 442 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 25 mm · 644 g |
Editor | Dei, George J Sefa |
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