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Fabricant, Michael; Fine, Michelle – Teachers College Press, 2012
This book will reset the discourse on charter schooling by systematically exploring the gap between the promise and the performance of charter schools. The authors do not defend the public school system, which for decades has failed primarily poor children of color. Instead, they use empirical evidence to determine whether charter schooling offers…
Descriptors: Evidence, Charter Schools, Economically Disadvantaged, School Districts
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Weis, Lois; Fine, Michelle – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1996
The divergent views of poor and working-class African-American and White men regarding the causes of their current condition are presented. Different "biographies of race" encourage African-American men to blame the economy and racism but White men to blame Black males for the economic plight of White men. The ways in which the two…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Attribution Theory, Blacks, Economically Disadvantaged
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Fine, Michelle; Burns, April; Payne, Yasser A. Payne; Torre, Maria E. – Teachers College Record, 2004
This article draws from research conducted with poor and working-class youth in California attending schools that suffer from structural disrepair, high rates of unqualified teachers, high teacher turnover rates, and inadequate books and instructional materials. Arguing that such schools accomplish more than simple reproduction of class and…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Instructional Materials, Faculty Mobility, Educational Quality
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Weis, Lois; Marusza, Julia; Fine, Michelle – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1998
Argues that all types of violence are deeply embedded inside poor and working-class white communities, specifically domestic violence. Indicates that many poor and working-class females are socialized into a code of silence that perpetuates the abuse cycle. States that educators and schools must break the silence and confront domestic violence.…
Descriptors: Battered Women, Child Abuse, Economically Disadvantaged, Emotional Response
Fine, Michelle – Journal of Urban and Cultural Studies, 1990
Public obsession with issues of measurement, early intervention, promotion, suspension, education, age of exit, and alternative education dominates discourse on what can be done about high school dropouts. Additional controversial issues of societal structural interdependence are examined for their importance in education reform for minority and…
Descriptors: Dropout Research, Dropouts, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Change
Fine, Michelle – Equity and Choice, 1993
Parents are being invited to step in to help improve public education, but they enter with neither resources nor power. Real parental involvement requires commitment to organizing parents and restructuring schools, as well as inventing rich versions of diverse educational democracies of difference. Schools must function like meaningful…
Descriptors: Democracy, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Change, Educational Improvement
Fine, Michelle – 1992
This essay describes charter school development and the 3-year Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) Schools Collaborative, which worked with educators and parents to transform comprehensive high schools, increase student outcomes, and establish teacher engagement and parental involvement. Charter schools (intellectual and emotional communities of adults,…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Assessment, Educational Change