R&L Education
Pages: 220
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-60709-458-6 • Hardback • November 2010 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-1-60709-459-3 • Paperback • October 2010 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-1-60709-460-9 • eBook • October 2010 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Adam Howard is an associate professor of education at Colby College. He is author of Learning Privilege: Lessons of Power and Identity in Affluent Schooling. RubZn A. Gaztambide-FernOndez is an assistant professor in the Department of Curriculum, Teaching, and Learning at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto. He is author of The Best of the Best: Becoming Elite at an American Boarding School.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction: Why Study Up?
Chapter 3 Preparing for Power: Twenty-Five Years Later
Chapter 4 Educating for Hegemony, Researching for Change: Collaborating with Teachers and Students to Examine Bullying at an Elite Private School
Chapter 5 A Part and Apart: Students of Color Negotiating Boundaries at an Elite Boarding School
Chapter 6 Stepping Outside Class: Affluent Students Resisting Privilege
Chapter 7 Getting In: How Elite Schools Play the College Game
Chapter 8 The Effects of Parents' College Tier on Offspring's Educational Attainments
Chapter 9 Class Dismissed?: The Social Class Worldviews of Privileged College Students
Chapter 10 Pageantry, Pedagogy, and Pandorea: Literacies of the Southern Belle
Chapter 11 On Not Seeming Like You Want Anything: Privileged Girls' Dilemmas of Ambition and Selflessness
Chapter 12 Outlining a Research Agenda on Elite Education
A great collection. Elite schooling is important not only because it defines the ladders others must climb to move up in the world, but also because it represents powerful families' best guess about the future their children will inherit. Educating Elites quickly will become required reading for any serious student of inequality in America.
— Mitchell L. Stevens, associate professor of education and sociology, Stanford University School of Education and author of Creating a Class: College
A fresh and interesting collection that contains a number of pieces by talented young scholars....highly recommended.
— Annette Lareau, Stanley I.Sheerr Professor, University of Pennsylvania
Class counts, and it counts in crucial ways in education. Adam Howard and Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández have provided us with a set of important and nuanced analyses of how elite class institutions and understandings work in a system that is riven with class relations. This is a significant book for anyone who cares about elitism in education in this society.
— Michael W. Apple, John Bascom Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Educational Policy Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison; author,
This volume
-explores a variety of topics related to elite educational environments in multiple and diverse educational contexts, including but not limited to K–12 schools.
-points toward a view of elite education that is not constrained within the borders of school walls.
-offers new perspectives for thinking and talking about the complexities of social class, elite education, and privilege. -The book draws attention to the continued significance of class as a critical dimension of inequality in the U.S.
-includes contributing authors with well-established and readily recognized names as well as emerging scholars who study elitesin the fields of education and sociology.
-is the only comprehensive book on the study of elite education.