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Randi Gray Kristensen – Community Literacy Journal, 2023
In the summer of 1978, at Church Teachers' College in Mandeville, Jamaica, a class of advanced students participating in the Jamaica Movement for the Advancement of Literacy (JAMAL) wrote, cast, rehearsed, and performed a play that satirized several major institutions--the family, the church, and the business sector--as well as class and gender…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Literacy, College Students, Decolonization
Flanagan, Sean K.; Margolius, Max; Ismail, Bushra; Hynes, Michelle; Pufall Jones, Elizabeth – America's Promise Alliance, 2020
This is the executive summary for the report, "Finding a Way Forward: Young People's Experiences Navigating the World of Work." It presents findings from a new qualitative study that explores specific questions about work and careers from the perspectives of 65 young adult participants in five career pathways programs across the country.…
Descriptors: Youth Employment, Minority Groups, Immigrants, Economically Disadvantaged
Harding, David J. – University of Chicago Press, 2010
For the middle class and the affluent, local ties seem to matter less and less these days, but in the inner city, your life can be irrevocably shaped by what block you live on. "Living the Drama" takes a close look at three neighborhoods in Boston to analyze the many complex ways that the context of community shapes the daily lives and…
Descriptors: Males, Urban Youth, Urban Areas, Neighborhoods
Ruffins, Paul – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2011
The first Innocence Project (IP) was founded in 1992 by attorneys Barry C. Scheck and Peter J. Neufeld at Yeshiva University's Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. The original goal was to free people whose innocence could be proven using DNA. So far, IPs have helped free nearly 300 men and women who had served an average of 13 years for crimes they…
Descriptors: Working Class, Crime, Economically Disadvantaged, Social Justice
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Kynard, Carmen – Teaching Education, 2011
ConscienceRebels are women of African descent who align themselves with the struggles of working class/working poor black communities and intentionally counter and re-script exclusive, dominant discourses. Any self-identified black female college student who focuses on the black poor or working class in their writing forms the basis of this study…
Descriptors: Working Class, Females, Economically Disadvantaged, Low Income Groups
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Oldfield, Kenneth – About Campus, 2007
For first-generation poor and working-class college students, surviving the social challenges of higher learning can be at least as demanding as achieving a high grade point average. To increase the odds that first-generation students with low-socioeconomic status backgrounds will persist and prosper in college, it is vital that their chosen…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Working Class, Academic Persistence, Foreign Culture
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Hatton, Elizabeth; Munns, Geoff; Dent, Jane Nicklin – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1996
Focuses on pedagogical relationships established in three different Australian primary schools designated as disadvantaged schools and located in ethnically diverse working-class areas. Contrasts the schools' pedagogical responses to children in poverty and analyses them in terms of their capacities to contribute to socially just outcomes from…
Descriptors: Compensatory Education, Diversity (Student), Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Policy