Description

Book Synopsis

In The American Dream for Students of Color, the tenets of the American Dream as a merit narrative enacted in schools are examined to better understand how beliefs about talent, hard work, and perseverance support the status quo rather than critical analyze barriers to educational success for students of color and students from a poverty context. Using narrative methodologies, this book explores the connections and consistencies within and between their personal narratives and the narratives of school youth and educators that work with them. Based on analysis of these shared stories, the authors argue for the importance of moving from individualized success stories that reify hard work and perseverance to collective, communal stories that serve to break down myths of meritocracy, critically examine inequities, and move educational advocates forward in authentic, audacious, hopeful ways.



Table of Contents

Chapter One: The Stories that Shaped Us

Chapter Two: The Stories Educators Tell

Chapter Three: The Stories Students Tell

Chapter Four: Reframing the Stories we Tell

Chapter Five: The Stories We Aspire to Tell

The American Dream for Students of Color: Myths

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Gretchen Givens Generett, Amy M. Olson

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      View other formats and editions of The American Dream for Students of Color: Myths by Gretchen Givens Generett

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 24/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793610973, 978-1793610973
      ISBN10: 1793610975

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In The American Dream for Students of Color, the tenets of the American Dream as a merit narrative enacted in schools are examined to better understand how beliefs about talent, hard work, and perseverance support the status quo rather than critical analyze barriers to educational success for students of color and students from a poverty context. Using narrative methodologies, this book explores the connections and consistencies within and between their personal narratives and the narratives of school youth and educators that work with them. Based on analysis of these shared stories, the authors argue for the importance of moving from individualized success stories that reify hard work and perseverance to collective, communal stories that serve to break down myths of meritocracy, critically examine inequities, and move educational advocates forward in authentic, audacious, hopeful ways.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter One: The Stories that Shaped Us

      Chapter Two: The Stories Educators Tell

      Chapter Three: The Stories Students Tell

      Chapter Four: Reframing the Stories we Tell

      Chapter Five: The Stories We Aspire to Tell

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