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Still failing : the continuing paradox of school desegregation / Stephen J. Caldas and Carl L. Bankston III.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Lanham ; Boulder ; New York ; London : Rowman & Littlefield, [2015]Copyright date: ©2015Edition: Second editionDescription: ix, 176 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1610489624
  • 9781610489621
  • 1610489632
  • 9781610489638
Uniform titles:
  • Forced to fail
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 379.260973 23
LOC classification:
  • LC212.52 .C35 2015
Contents:
1. School Desegregation: Irrelevant Public Policy? -- 2. How Did We Get Here? -- 3. Desegregation Expansion-and Limits -- 4. The Demographic Transformation of America -- 5. It takes "a certain" Kind of Village to Raise a Child -- 6. The Power of School Peers and the Power of Community -- 7. School Desegregation and the Racial Achievement Gap -- 8. A New Perspective of Race and Schooling: Attaining the Dream -- --
1. School Desegregation: Irrelevant Public Policy? -- The Continuing Racial and Socioeconomic Segregation of American Schools -- Resegregation by the Numbers -- Failure of Will or Failure of Command and Control? -- Redistributing Children's "Social Capital" -- The Fallacy of "Diversity" -- Unintended Consequences -- A Noble, Misguided Vision -- Blinders of Moral Commitment -- -- 2. How Did We Get Here? -- The Long Legal Road -- The Genesis of Civil Rights -- The Paradox of Slavery in Free Market -- Society Reconstruction and the Origins of "Affirmative" Protection of Group Rights -- Retreat from Reconstruction and the Protection of Group Rights -- Plessy v. Ferguson and "Separate but Equal" -- The Era of Jim Crow and American "Apartheid" -- Black Grass Roots Resistance to "Separate but Equal" -- The Earthquake of Brown I -- Grass Roots Civil Rights Struggle -- A Return to Reconstruction -- The Desegregation Battle Intensifies -- A Sea Change of Civil Rights -- Freedom of Choice -- "Affirmative" Action -- Maximum Federal Involvement -- -- 3. Desegregation Expansion-and Limits -- Setting Limits -- Unitary Status and the End of Oversight -- The Diversity Doctrine and Supreme Court Schizophrenia -- The Future of Desegregation Litigation -- -- 4. The Demographic Transformation of America -- A Changing Society -- Family Structure -- Demographic Change: New Student Populations -- Hispanic Explosion -- The Asian Advantage -- The Problem of Poverty -- Demographics and School Desegregation -- -- 5. It takes "a certain" Kind of Village to Raise a Child -- What is Social Capital? -- Families, Schools and Communities: Social Capital and School Environments -- Social Capital in Child and Parent Interactions -- Social Capital in Parent-to-Parent Interactions -- Social Capital in Parent and School Interactions -- Social Capital in Student-to-Student Interactions -- The Power of School Peer Cultures -- -- 6. The Power of School Peers and the Power of Community -- The Positive Power of Peers -- Disruptive School Climates -- Schools and the Creation of Community Social Capital -- Desegregation and the Destruction of Community Social Capital -- Understanding the Importance of Community -- -- 7. School Desegregation and the Racial Achievement Gap -- A Controversial Topic -- Is There Really a Gap? -- The SAT/ACT Gap -- The High School Gap -- The Higher Ed Gap -- Why the Continuing Gap? -- The Origins of the Black-White Gap -- History of Racial Oppression as Cause of the Black/White Achievement Gap -- Environmental Hazards and Educational Achievement -- School Curriculum Stereotype Threat -- Why the Need for School Racial Integration? -- Do Blacks Achieve Better in Majority White Schools? -- Is White Achievement Hurt in Majority Black Schools? -- Are Standardized Tests Culturally Biased Against Minorities? -- The Stubborn Gap -- How Can We Close the Gap? -- -- 8. A New Perspective of Race and Schooling: Attaining the Dream -- New Paradigms -- Resistance -- Socioeconomic Integration Strategies that Work -- Neighborhood Schools -- Strengthening Communities -- Public Support for Public Education -- Local Control in Minority Communities -- Approach Reforms with Caution and Limited Expectations -- Let Schools Be Schools.
Summary: "Still Failing: The Continuing Paradox of School Desegregation is a significantly updated and revised version of Caldas and Bankston's previous book Forced to Fail: The Paradox of School Desegregation. The book includes an analysis of the most significant Supreme Court cases that have been decided in the ten years since the first edition of the book appeared. The authors consider the important implications of these recent rulings for the future of school desegregation in America's schools. Social capital theory is used to explain why schools and communities continue to be segregated along racial and ethnic lines. Still Failing also provides the most recent U.S. census and Department of Education statistics documenting the continuing segregation of American schools and districts. The book also continues to track the persistent racial achievement gap, using the newest ACT, SAT, and NAEP testing figures. Finally, the book considers what present segregation trends portend for future efforts to racially and ethnically integrate schools, and close achievement gaps."--Publisher's website.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book North Campus North Campus Main Collection 379.260973 CAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A556718B

Revised edition of: Forced to fail. Westport, Conn. : Praeger, 2005.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. School Desegregation: Irrelevant Public Policy? -- 2. How Did We Get Here? -- 3. Desegregation Expansion-and Limits -- 4. The Demographic Transformation of America -- 5. It takes "a certain" Kind of Village to Raise a Child -- 6. The Power of School Peers and the Power of Community -- 7. School Desegregation and the Racial Achievement Gap -- 8. A New Perspective of Race and Schooling: Attaining the Dream -- --

1. School Desegregation: Irrelevant Public Policy? -- The Continuing Racial and Socioeconomic Segregation of American Schools -- Resegregation by the Numbers -- Failure of Will or Failure of Command and Control? -- Redistributing Children's "Social Capital" -- The Fallacy of "Diversity" -- Unintended Consequences -- A Noble, Misguided Vision -- Blinders of Moral Commitment -- -- 2. How Did We Get Here? -- The Long Legal Road -- The Genesis of Civil Rights -- The Paradox of Slavery in Free Market -- Society Reconstruction and the Origins of "Affirmative" Protection of Group Rights -- Retreat from Reconstruction and the Protection of Group Rights -- Plessy v. Ferguson and "Separate but Equal" -- The Era of Jim Crow and American "Apartheid" -- Black Grass Roots Resistance to "Separate but Equal" -- The Earthquake of Brown I -- Grass Roots Civil Rights Struggle -- A Return to Reconstruction -- The Desegregation Battle Intensifies -- A Sea Change of Civil Rights -- Freedom of Choice -- "Affirmative" Action -- Maximum Federal Involvement -- -- 3. Desegregation Expansion-and Limits -- Setting Limits -- Unitary Status and the End of Oversight -- The Diversity Doctrine and Supreme Court Schizophrenia -- The Future of Desegregation Litigation -- -- 4. The Demographic Transformation of America -- A Changing Society -- Family Structure -- Demographic Change: New Student Populations -- Hispanic Explosion -- The Asian Advantage -- The Problem of Poverty -- Demographics and School Desegregation -- -- 5. It takes "a certain" Kind of Village to Raise a Child -- What is Social Capital? -- Families, Schools and Communities: Social Capital and School Environments -- Social Capital in Child and Parent Interactions -- Social Capital in Parent-to-Parent Interactions -- Social Capital in Parent and School Interactions -- Social Capital in Student-to-Student Interactions -- The Power of School Peer Cultures -- -- 6. The Power of School Peers and the Power of Community -- The Positive Power of Peers -- Disruptive School Climates -- Schools and the Creation of Community Social Capital -- Desegregation and the Destruction of Community Social Capital -- Understanding the Importance of Community -- -- 7. School Desegregation and the Racial Achievement Gap -- A Controversial Topic -- Is There Really a Gap? -- The SAT/ACT Gap -- The High School Gap -- The Higher Ed Gap -- Why the Continuing Gap? -- The Origins of the Black-White Gap -- History of Racial Oppression as Cause of the Black/White Achievement Gap -- Environmental Hazards and Educational Achievement -- School Curriculum Stereotype Threat -- Why the Need for School Racial Integration? -- Do Blacks Achieve Better in Majority White Schools? -- Is White Achievement Hurt in Majority Black Schools? -- Are Standardized Tests Culturally Biased Against Minorities? -- The Stubborn Gap -- How Can We Close the Gap? -- -- 8. A New Perspective of Race and Schooling: Attaining the Dream -- New Paradigms -- Resistance -- Socioeconomic Integration Strategies that Work -- Neighborhood Schools -- Strengthening Communities -- Public Support for Public Education -- Local Control in Minority Communities -- Approach Reforms with Caution and Limited Expectations -- Let Schools Be Schools.

"Still Failing: The Continuing Paradox of School Desegregation is a significantly updated and revised version of Caldas and Bankston's previous book Forced to Fail: The Paradox of School Desegregation. The book includes an analysis of the most significant Supreme Court cases that have been decided in the ten years since the first edition of the book appeared. The authors consider the important implications of these recent rulings for the future of school desegregation in America's schools. Social capital theory is used to explain why schools and communities continue to be segregated along racial and ethnic lines. Still Failing also provides the most recent U.S. census and Department of Education statistics documenting the continuing segregation of American schools and districts. The book also continues to track the persistent racial achievement gap, using the newest ACT, SAT, and NAEP testing figures. Finally, the book considers what present segregation trends portend for future efforts to racially and ethnically integrate schools, and close achievement gaps."--Publisher's website.

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