Fr. 98.50

Contemporary Perspectives on Capital in Educational Contexts

English · Paperback / Softback

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A volume in Contemporary Perspectives on Capital in Educational Contexts
Series Editor RoSusan D. Bartee, University of Mississippi
The edited volume, Contemporary Perspectives on Capital in Educational Contexts, is timely in its unique and
appropriate analyses of the prevailing internal and external dynamics of capital as indicative of the type of currency
within institutional structures or the currency among individual stakeholders of education. The intersection of
capital and currency emerges similarly and differently within the American compulsory-based system of K-12 and
the choice-based system of higher education. More specifically, Contemporary Perspectives on Capital in
Educational Contexts disentangles the broader challenges and opportunities of the institution of education and the
individuals who comprise. Emerging insights from the analyses provide an informed basis for ascertaining the rules of engagement and means of negotiation
for the respective constituencies. With that said, this volume essentially responds to three important questions: 1) What are the tenets of capital and currency
in public schools and higher education?; 2 ) How do institutions and individuals navigate those tenets?; and 3) What general and specific implications do capital
hold for the educational pipeline and beyond? These questions provide a useful framework for engaging critical conversations about the dynamics of capital
while offering perspectives about how to improve the quality of currency in K-12 or colleges and universities. These questions further serve as a basis for
eliciting more questions toward the consideration capital as both a conceptual construct and applicable model.
Contemporary Perspectives on Capital in Educational Contexts, too, is an expansion of the work of School matters: Why African American students need
multiple forms of capital, where Bartee & Brown (2006) examines how the acquisition and possession of capital equips African American students in a highperforming,
high-achieving magnet school in Chicago for competitiveness in school-generated and non-school generated activities. Success experienced by
the students and the school become associated with the academic rigor and reputation while any shortcomings reflect an inadequate capacity of the school or
the student to appropriately engage the other. School matters: Why African American students need multiple forms of capital (2006) further introduces an
initial exploration of different forms of capital as producer (improve the status quo through inputs), consumer (participant based upon outputs), and regulator
(maintain the status quo through the process) within the educational system. The multifaceted role of capital demonstrates its span of influence for institutional
and individual capacities.

Product details

Assisted by Rosusan D. Bartee (Editor)
Publisher Information Age Publishing
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 18.07.2011
 
EAN 9781617353635
ISBN 978-1-61735-363-5
No. of pages 242
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 13 mm
Weight 374 g
Subject Humanities, art, music > Education > Education system

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