Canal Town Youth

Canal Town Youth
Author: Julia Hall
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2001-01-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780791448144

A poignant study of how a group of poor white urban youth find respite from poverty, violence, and racism in a local community center.

Studying Urban Youth Culture Primer

Studying Urban Youth Culture Primer
Author: Greg Dimitriadis
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2008
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780820472690

This book provides a concise introduction to the practical and theoretical complexities of studying urban youth culture today. Looking across disciplines such as anthropology, sociology, and education, Dimitriadis explores the ways urban youth have been framed - in often limiting and problematic ways - in the popular and academic imagination. Moving beyond critique alone, this highly accessible primer opens a discussion about what a truly powerful, emergent field of critical youth studies might look like. Looking toward the future of this field, this book discusses the most important methodological and substantive trends and issues scholars will be addressing now and in the years to come. The Studying Urban Youth Culture Primer is an indispensable text for students in a range of qualitative methods and urban education courses.

Canal Town Youth

Canal Town Youth
Author: Julia Marusza
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 178
Release: 2001-01-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780791448137

A poignant study of how a group of poor white urban youth find respite from poverty, violence, and racism in a local community center.

Pride in the Projects

Pride in the Projects
Author: Nancy L. Deutsch
Publisher: NYU Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2008-07-12
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0814719910

Based on four years of field work with both the adolescent members and staff of an inner-city youth organization in a large mid-western city, Pride in the Projects examines the construction of identity as it occurs within teens' local contexts, emphasizing the relationships within which identities are formed. Drawing on research in psychology, sociology, education, and race and gender studies, the volume highlights the inadequacies in current identity development theories, expanding our understanding of the lives of urban teens and the ways in which interpersonal connections serve as powerful contexts for self-construction. The book closes with implications for practice, alerting scholars, educators, practitioners, and concerned citizens of the positive developmental possibilities when we pay attention to the voices of the youth.

The Praeger Handbook of Urban Education

The Praeger Handbook of Urban Education
Author: Philip M. Anderson
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 681
Release: 2006-03-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0313039003

Maintaining that urban teaching and learning is characterized by many contradictions, this work proposes that there is a wide range of social, cultural, psychological, and pedagogical knowledge urban educators must possess in order to engage in effective and transformative practice. It is necessary for those teaching in urban schools to be scholar-practitioners, rather than bureaucrats who can only follow rather than analyze, understand, and create. Ten major sections cover the myriad issues of urban education as it exists today.

Canal Town Youth

Canal Town Youth
Author: Julia Hall
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 178
Release: 2001-01-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0791491412

This book considers how impoverished youth living in a deindustrialized urban neighborhood struggle to make sense of their lives in today's economy. Using participant observation and in-depth interviews with a group of eighteen white middle school girls and boys who walk each day from their multi-ethnic bilingual school to the historically white/Irish community center, the author discovered that the poor white youth are experiencing lives saturated with domestic violence and marked by a strong sense of racism. She also found that the youth position the community center as a space in which they feel a sense of safety, belonging, and importance. But upon closer examination, the community center can also be seen as a literal white "construction site," where the scaffolding that supports and sustains white supremacist ideology is produced and encouraged within children, within the neighborhood, across communities, and across generations.

The Youth's Companion

The Youth's Companion
Author: Nathaniel Willis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 852
Release: 1923
Genre: Children's periodicals
ISBN:

Includes music.