Fr. 47.90

Schooling as Uncertainty - An Ethnographic Memoir in Comparative Education

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext This extraordinary book, at once raw and inspiring, invites readers into the life of one ethnographer and her engagement with a rural Tanzanian community and its school over almost three decades. Vavrus draws on her collected field notes from Tanzania and her own personal letters and journals to show us how schooling and its intersection with sexuality, child rearing, marriage, work, and public policy have changed over time in East Africa and North America. In an innovative combination of autobiography and ethnography, Vavrus invites us to both question – and celebrate - our precarious efforts to secure our own lives and livelihoods through schooling. Informationen zum Autor Frances Vavrus is Professor of Comparative and International Development Education at the University of Minnesota, USA. She is Chair of the Joint ILO/UNESCO Committee on the Application of the Recommendations Concerning Teaching Personnel and the co-author of Rethinking Case Study Research (2017) and Teaching in Tension (2013). Klappentext In today's uncertain world, few beliefs remain as firmly entrenched as the optimistic view that more schooling will lead to a better life. Though this may be true in the aggregate, how do we explain the circumstances when schooling fails to produce certainty or even does us harm? Schooling as Uncertainty addresses this question by combining ethnography and memoir as it guides readers on a 30-year journey through fieldwork and familyhood in Tanzania and academic life in the USA. Using reflexive, longitudinal ethnographic research, the book examines how African youth, particularly young women, employ schooling in an attempt to counter the uncertainties of marriage, child rearing, employment, and HIV/AIDS. Adopting a narrative approach, Vavrus tells the story of how her life became entangled with a community on Mount Kilimanjaro and how she and they sought greater security through schooling and, to varying degrees, succeeded. Vorwort Schooling as Uncertainty explores the question of why schooling often fails to produce its desired outcomes, or even does us harm, through a combination of ethnography and memoir. Zusammenfassung In today’s uncertain world, few beliefs remain as firmly entrenched as the optimistic view that more schooling will lead to a better life. Though this may be true in the aggregate, how do we explain the circumstances when schooling fails to produce certainty or even does us harm? Schooling as Uncertainty addresses this question by combining ethnography and memoir as it guides readers on a 30-year journey through fieldwork and familyhood in Tanzania and academic life in the USA. Using reflexive, longitudinal ethnographic research, the book examines how African youth, particularly young women, employ schooling in an attempt to counter the uncertainties of marriage, child rearing, employment, and HIV/AIDS. Adopting a narrative approach, Vavrus tells the story of how her life became entangled with a community on Mount Kilimanjaro and how she and they sought greater security through schooling and, to varying degrees, succeeded. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Part I: Shaky Beginnings 1. Marital Misgivings2. Spoons, Strikes, and Schooling Part II: Precarious Parenthood 3. A Difficult Delivery4. Preventable Deaths Part III: Fallible Expertise 5. Questioning Dr. Spock6: Questioning Corporal Punishment Part IV: AIDS and the Ordinariness of Crisis 7. Schooling, Sponsorship, and Social Contingency8. The Burden of Care: Grandparents and the AIDS Crisis Part V: Policy Arbitrariness 9: Tripping on the Tenure Track 10. Aspirational Equality and the Precarity of Policy Part VI: The Social Life of Uncertainty 11. Speed Bumps on Lema Road12. Gendered ContingenciesEpilogueGlossaryAcknowledgementsReferencesIndex...

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