Sociology of education: Recent print books
This guide is for those interested in the sociology of education, both research and practice.
Recent print books
Creating third spaces of learning for post-capitalism: lessons from educators and activists by Gary L. Anderson; Dipti Desai; Ana Inés Heras; Carol Anne Spreen
Publication Date: 2023In this book, the authors' post-capitalist approach to change focuses less on what we need to dismantle and more on what educators and activists are building in its place. Studying schools and other social organizations in the Global North and South, the authors identify and examine some of the most interesting counterhegemonic spaces in both formal and informal education today.Equality or equity: toward a model of community-responsive education by Jeffrey M. R. Duncan-Andrade; H. Richard Milner (Series ed.)
Publication Date: 2022A leading scholar-practitioner and ardent proponent of culturally responsive forms of education, Jeffrey M. R. Duncan-Andrade aims to settle the debates over whether we should work toward a public education system built on the goal of equality, in which identical resources are provided for all students, or equity, in which different resources are offered in response to differences in student interests and needs. Duncan-Andrade centers his argument on the importance of creating meaningful education experiences for all students, particularly for low-income students of color and immigrant students, who have gained relatively fewer benefits from decades of equality-focused education reform.Educational justice: challenges for ideas, institutions, and practices in Chilean education by Camila Moyano Dávila
Publication Date: 2022"This book presents a novel perspective on education as a social right. Literature on this topic has focused on inclusion as the universal concept whereby access to education is examined. As a moral principle, this concept opens new challenges in different ways if we take a deeper view into diverse contexts."Black lives matter in US schools: race, education, and resistance by Boni Wozole (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022Black Lives Matter in US Schools critically examines the relationship between schooling and sociocultural abolitionist movements such as #BlackLivesMatter. Aligning with a long history of education scholars who have insisted on the enmeshed nature of schools and society, the book addresses the role of various forms of curricula that perpetuate anti-Blackness while simultaneously shaping Black ways of being, knowing, and doing.Risk society and education in post-disaster Fukushima by Kaoru Miyazawa
Publication Date: 2022"In response to the explosion of the Fukushima Daiichi power plant in March 2011, this book examines how the concept of a risk society was handled in the various education programs implemented in post-disaster Fukushima."Belonging in changing educational spaces: negotiating global, transnational, and neoliberal dynamics by Karen Monkman; Ann Frkovich
Publication Date: 2022"This book explores the impacts on personal and professional, local and global forms of belonging in educational spaces amidst rapid changes shaped by globalization. Encouraging readers to consider the idea of belonging as an educational goal as much as a guiding educational strategy, this text forms a unique contribution to the field."Critical theory: rituals, pedagogies and resistance by Peter McLaren
Publication Date: 2022This collection of essays incorporates some of the most important and longstanding foundational texts in education developed by the leading educational neo-Gramscian social theorist Peter McLaren. The volume provides a much necessary framework for understanding more precisely not only the historical and philosophical foundations for McLaren's ideas, but even more importantly, it unpacks a clear understanding of the dynamics of ideological production framing the epistemicidal nature of capitalist schools.The social construction of the US academic elite: a mixed methods study of two disciplines by Stephanie Beyer
Publication Date: 2022This book explores the stark stratification and struggles over classifications in US academia from a relational perspective, looking beyond material differences and tracing its roots to symbolic power relations. Based on a mixed methods study drawing on both interview and quantitative data, it offers an account of the workings of academia, shedding light on the structures that permit elite departments to define categories and impose legitimate scientific definitions, to which the non-elite must adhere.The sociology of education: a systematic analysis by Jeanne H. Ballantine; Jenny M. Stuber; Judson G. Everitt
Publication Date: 2022"The ninth edition of The Sociology of Education examines the field in rare breadth by incorporating a diverse range of theoretical approaches and a distinct sociological lens in its overview of education and schooling."A real-world guide to restorative justice in schools practical philosophy, useful tools, and true stories by Nicholas Bradford; David LeSal
Publication Date: 2021This book is designed to help you navigate the challenges and joys of building and maintaining a healthy restorative ecosystem in your school, while providing concrete tools and real-world stories to guide you through the process.Politics, education, and social problems: complicated classroom conversations by Jennifer Rich
Publication Date: 2021This book offers an innovative perspective on the intersection of politics, education, and social problems. It considers how we can create social change by talking about politics and social problems in more open, direct, and inclusive ways in educational spaces. Drawing on data from a range of settings, this book closely examines how and when complicated conversations take place in classrooms, schools, and communities.School segregation and social cohesion in Santiago: perspectives from the Chilean experience by Andres Molina
Publication Date: 2021This book examines the consequences of educational segregation from the perspective of social cohesion. It investigates the impact of separating students along socioeconomic lines on student attitudes, dispositions and outlooks considered important for social cohesion as well as on achievement, opening the discussion about the social costs of school segregation. The separation of students based on their social background is a common feature of schooling in many modern systems. This is not only due to the influence of residential segregation but also to the effects of policies promoting educational privatisation, parental choice and student academic selection. By recognising the importance of schooling for citizenship and social integration, the chapters in this book explore how the separation of students throughout their school lives can contribute to the division of citizens beyond school, and how social segregation in school systems affect social cohesion more broadly.
- Last Updated: Jan 22, 2025 1:09 PM
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