R&L Education
Pages: 200
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-57886-217-7 • Paperback • May 2005 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Mano Singham is director of the University Center for Innovation in Teaching and Education and adjunct associate professor of physics at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 1 Introduction
Chapter 3 2 Education in the Broad Political Context
Chapter 4 3 Myths about the Achievement Gap
Chapter 5 4 The Case against the Genetic Model
Chapter 6 5 Income, Wealth, and the Achievement Gap
Chapter 7 6 Other Possible Causes of the Gap
Chapter 8 7 Success Stories and What We Can Learn from Them
Chapter 9 8 Why Good Teaching Matters and What It Takes to Achieve It
Chapter 10 9 Why Good Teaching Practices Are Relatively Rare in U.S. Schools and Even Rarer in Poor and Minority Schools
Chapter 11 10 How and Why Did It Get This Way?
Part 12 Index
Part 13 About the Author
Singham looks at the problem of the black-white achievement gap in US education in the context of larger political realities, and contends that in order to understand this gap, we must know what is happening with the educational system as a whole.
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