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Asare, Yaa – London Review of Education, 2022
A prominent feature of the Black Lives Matter protests following the murder of George Floyd has been the renewed call for schools to become antiracist. What can be learnt from past unsuccessful attempts to implement antiracist education? Specific critiques of the antiracist movement made by prominent academics such as Paul Gilroy are worth…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Social Class
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Briana M. Bivens – History of Education Quarterly, 2025
The Highlander Nursery School, run by the Highlander Folk School from 1938 to 1953, provided no-cost early care and learning to the white working-class children of Summerfield, Tennessee. While Highlander is best known as a democratic education and movement-building hub that builds adults' capacity to shape labor and racial justice in their…
Descriptors: Barriers, Educational Benefits, Working Class, Whites
Michelle Wing – ProQuest LLC, 2022
In this dissertation, I examine the socioeconomic impacts of college degree attainment on white working-class Millennials. I conducted a qualitative study in Western New York, individually interviewing twenty men and twenty women. Additionally, I facilitated three focus groups (one male, one female, and one mixed gender) to further discuss these…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Socioeconomic Status, Educational Attainment, Working Class
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Auðardóttir, Auður Magndís – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
The aim of this study is to analyse working-class mothers' narratives of social interactions among parents at their children's schools. A special focus is paid to the emotions that arise in such interactions and their role in the reproduction of class. A narrative analysis of six stories of white, working-class mothers of compulsory school aged…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Working Class, Mothers, Parent Participation
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Amalia Daché; Jonathon Sun; Christopher Krause – Urban Education, 2024
This study explores the contrasting racialized geographies of St. Louis County and factors of local college accessibility by re-framing the concepts of college deserts and oases post the Ferguson uprising. Through a Geographic Information Systems (GIS) analysis of educational divides, capital accumulation, and policing, we found dual spatial…
Descriptors: Geographic Information Systems, Racial Factors, Geographic Regions, Access to Education
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Jazmin A. Muro – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
Previous research highlights how schools value white, middle-class modes of parental involvement, we know less about Latinx parents' involvement in their children's schools. This article compares the participatory patterns of Latinx and non-Latinx white parents whose children attend a Spanish/English dual-immersion school in Los Angeles. Drawing…
Descriptors: Parent Associations, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Immersion Programs, Racial Segregation
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Wilson, Suzanne; McGuire, Kim – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Bourdieu argued that class-based inequalities influenced educational outcomes and this paper illustrates the relevance of Bourdieu's concepts in understanding one specific community. A wider study by the authors used the concept of habitus to identify factors which impacted on the participants--predominantly white working-class…
Descriptors: Whites, Working Class, Mothers, Mother Attitudes
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Crawford, Claire E. – Journal of Education Policy, 2019
This paper challenges the notion that quantitative data -- as a numeric truth -- exist independent of a nation's political and racial landscape. Utilising large-scale national attainment data, the analysis challenges the belief that 'White working class' children in England, especially boys, are 'the new oppressed' -- as a former equality adviser…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Whites, Working Class
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Adjogatse, Kafui; Miedema, Esther – Whiteness and Education, 2022
Scrutinising disproportionate media and political attention provided to the ills of the 'white working-class', this article examines the framing of their apparent underachievement in education policy and discourse in early post-Brexit vote England. In a political context dominated by anti-immigration and nationalist rhetoric, this article aims to…
Descriptors: Working Class, Whites, Underachievement, Foreign Policy
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Simmons, Robin; Connelly, Danny; Thompson, Ron – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2020
This paper uses the work of Pierre Bourdieu to understand the lives of a set of young White working-class men living in a deprived urban locale in the north of England. All participants were classified as NEET (not in education, employment or training) throughout the research and had spent lengthy periods of time outside education and work before…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Working Class, Whites, Males
Lynn, Terence Francis – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This qualitative, phenomenological study situated in grounded theory aimed to identify the forces that impede or support white working-class males in pursuing, adapting to, and remaining in higher education and making meaningful progress in their educational goals. Utilizing a feminist ecological perspective, the researcher was able to outline and…
Descriptors: Males, Working Class, Whites, Higher Education
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Tocci, Charles; Ryan, Ann Marie – History of Education, 2022
The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was a novel United States federal education programme that enrolled nearly three million men during the 1930s and early 1940s. This public work relief programme provides a case study of the ways that masculine, eugenicist ideas concerning public education evolved from the Progressive Era through the Great…
Descriptors: Males, North Americans, Educational History, Federal Programs
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Garth Stahl – Advances in Race and Ethnicity in Education, 2017
In terms of education attainment in the United Kingdom, the white working class remains the lowest performing ethnic group, and their academic underperformance has ominous implications for their long-term life chances. This chapter investigates how white working-class boys experience pathologization and deficit discourses in their schooling as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Whites, Working Class, Males
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Novakovic, Yvonne – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2019
This paper addresses the challenge of developing a conceptual framing for the meaning of value with respect to higher education. The author argues that criteria derived from analyses of the life histories of longstanding graduates, which often take the form of counternarratives and proceed from that which matters to them, can inform an evaluative…
Descriptors: Biographies, College Graduates, Value Judgment, Higher Education
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Ward, Michael R. M. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2018
Since the 1970s, the process of deindustrialisation, accompanied by social, cultural and political changes, has altered youth transitions from school to work. This paper is drawn from an Economic and Social Research Council-funded study that explored the diversity of white, working-class young men (aged between 16 and 18) in a post-industrial…
Descriptors: Working Class, Males, Vocational Education, Masculinity
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