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One of the most seductive topics in recent years is the field of
social capital - the webs of trust, mutual obligation, and cultural
knowledge that flow through local information - that yield
resources in human-scale associations of individuals. When we ask
about the implications for children's learning and performance in
the school institution, however, the construct quickly becomes
slippery to hold. The 2001 volume provides five papers that offer
empirical evidence on the nature and life of social capital across
diverse ethnic groups and cultural settings. These fresh studies
delve into the resources embedded in Latino and Asian-American peer
groups, how immigrant parents' networks and norms variably push
their children to achieve in school, and how teenagers' involvement
in ethnic-rooted churches contribute social capital. The volume
includes three commentaries, authored by David Baker, Patricia
Fernandez-Kelly, and Raymond Wong, and a review chapter by the
editors.
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