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Integration Interrupted - Tracking, Black Students, and Acting White after Brown (Hardcover)
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Integration Interrupted - Tracking, Black Students, and Acting White after Brown (Hardcover)
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There is lots of popular and scholarly concern today about why
black students aren't doing better in school. The most popular
explanation, the "acting white" thesis, is that they have a culture
that rejects achievement-that students' peer cultures hold them
back. As Karolyn Tyson convincingly demonstrates, that is not the
main or even a central explanation of black academic
underachievement. Instead of looking at the students, Tyson argues
that when and where students understand race to be connected with
achievement, it is a powerful, if indirect, lesson conveyed by
schools. Integration Interrupted focuses on the consequences,
particularly for black students, of the practice of curriculum
tracking in the post-Brown era, and on the relationship between
racialized tracking and the emergence of academic excellence as a
"white thing." Desegregation may have been officially outlawed over
fifty years ago, but race now determines which classes students are
in: black students are typically placed in general and remedial
classes and whites in advanced classes. In effect, same school, but
different schooling. Right after Brown, it was easy to see the
deliberate use of tracking to separate kids in schools that courts
had mandated integrated. The practice still exists in many schools,
though perhaps exercised more subtly, but with same
outcome-tracking, including gifted and magnet programs, contributes
to distinct racial patterns in achievement. Through ten years of
classroom observations and hundreds of interviews with students,
parents, and school personnel in thirty schoools, Tyson found that
only in very specific circumstances, when black students were
drastically underrrepresented in advanced and gifted classes, did
anxieties about "the burden of acting white" emerge. But "acting
white" is not the only nor the most important consequence of
tracking for black students. Tyson reveals how the practice
influences high achieving black students' conceptions of racial
identity, achievement, and getting ahead; what courses they enroll
in, who their friends are, and how they navigate peer pressure with
being studious. In short, they face many of the same challenges as
white youths face but with significant additional burdens. The rich
narratives on the lived experience of black students in Integration
Interrupted throw light on the complex relationships underlying the
academic performance of black students and convincingly
demonstrates that the problem lies not with students, but instead
with how we organize our schools.
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