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Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, & Schooling
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Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, & Schooling book
Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, & Schooling
DOI link for Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, & Schooling
Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, & Schooling book
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ABSTRACT
This book is the definitive and final presentation of John Ogbu’s cultural ecological model and the many debates that his work has sparked during the past decade. The theory and empirical foundation of Ogbu’s scholarship, which some have mistakenly reduced to the "acting white hypothesis," is fully presented and re-visited in this posthumous collection of his new writings plus the works of over 20 scholars. Ogbu’s own chapters present how his ideas about minority education and culture developed. Readers will find in these chapters the theoretical roots of his cultural ecological model. The book is organized as a dialogue between John Ogbu and the scholarly community, including his most ardent critics; Ogbu’s own work can be read at the same time as his critics have their say.
Minority Status, Oppositional Culture, and Schooling examines content, methodological, and policy issues framing the debate on academic achievement, school engagement, and oppositional culture. It brings together in one volume, for the first time, some of the most critical works on these issues as well as examples of programs aimed at re-engagement. In addition to African Americans, it also looks at school engagement among Native American and Latino students. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the study of the academic achievement gap.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I: History and Framework
chapter 2|35 pages
Collective Identity and the Burden of “Acting White” in Black History, Community, and Education
chapter 3|25 pages
Ways of Knowing: The Ethnographic Approach to the Study of Collective Identity and Schooling
chapter 5|18 pages
Language and Collective Identity among Adults and Students in a Black Community
chapter 6|13 pages
“Signithia, You Can Do Better Than That”: John Ogbu (and Me) and the Nine Lives Peoples SIGNITHIA FORDHAM
part |2 pages
Part II: Collective Identity, Black Americans, and Schooling
chapter 7|22 pages
High School Students of Color Talk about Accusations of “Acting White”
chapter 10|18 pages
What does “Acting White” Actually Mean? Racial Identity, Adolescent Development, and Academic Achievement among African American Youth
chapter 12|16 pages
Racial Identity Attitudes, School Achievement, and Academic Self-Efficacy among African American High School Students
part |2 pages
Part III: Reassessment and Methodological Issues
chapter 13|23 pages
The Burden of “Acting White”: Do Black Adolescents Disparage Academic Achievement?
chapter 14|14 pages
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Confirming Oppositional Culture Theory
chapter 15|36 pages
Quantitative Studies of Oppositional Culture: Arguments and Evidence
chapter 16|26 pages
The Structure of Opportunity and Adolescents’ Academic Achievement Attitudes and Behaviors
chapter 17|21 pages
Oppositional Identity and Academic Achievement among African American Males
part |2 pages
Part IV: Cross-Cultural Studies of Identity
chapter 18|36 pages
Situational Ethnicity and Patterns of School Performance among Immigrant and Nonimmigrant Mexican-Descent Students
chapter 20|15 pages
A Quantitative Examination of Oppositional Identity among African American and Latino Middle-School Students
chapter 21|35 pages
Ogbu’s Voluntary and Involuntary Minority Hypothesis and the Politics of Caring
part |2 pages
Part V: Model Programs and Applications
chapter 22|27 pages
Forming Academic Identities: Accommodation without Assimilation among Involuntary Minorities
chapter 23|15 pages
The Minority Achievement Committee: Students Leading Students to Greater Success in School
part |2 pages
Part VI: Conclusion