This book's most important goal is to explore styles of teaching
and learning that can promote resiliency among women from
disadvantaged backgrounds. These findings can be useful in
affecting policy decisions as professionals begin the process of
restructuring our educational system to meet the needs of a diverse
student population. Higher education is now attempting to attract
and encourage varied students and this book will provide educators
with information not only about how to educate women from difficult
backgrounds, but how women in this population have felt about their
past, their success, and their schooling. The author provides
insights into what disadvantaged women need and want from
schools.
The author conducted in-depth interviews with 21 academically
high achieving women who were also disadvantaged as children,
having faced multiple risk factors. Qualitative measures were used
to explore how our education system has either assisted these women
in their achievement or set up barriers to their success. The
interpretations, however, go beyond simply listing what was good
and bad in these women's education experiences. The results suggest
patterns in their psychology and in the traditional social
structures that discourage learning among certain populations. The
author discusses the sociological and psychological barriers to
education (especially higher education) for women who have
experienced disadvantages.
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