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Literacy, United States Studies - General & Miscellaneous, General & Miscellaneous Social Services, Poverty, Social Sciences - General & Miscellaneous, U.S. Politics & Government - General & Miscellaneous
Reading Poverty by Patrick Shannon β€” book cover

Reading Poverty

by Patrick Shannon
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Overview

A provocative look at how social, political, and economic contexts inform the literacy education field.

Synopsis

"Poverty has everything to do with schooling-how it is theorized, how it is organized, how it runs." So says author Patrick Shannon in this provocative look at how social, political, and economic contexts inform the literacy education field. Here we see how competing representations of poverty underlie our assumptions about IQ testing, textbook content, national standards, standardized achievement tests, volunteerism, school/business partnerships, and many other contemporary issues in education.

The author lays out a careful critique of initiatives like America Reads and popular texts like William Bennett's The Book of Virtues and Hernstein and Murray's The Bell Curve. Uncovering the inherent biases in these approaches, Shannon argues that we have perpetuated a system geared toward the protection of property over the well-being of people.

While Reading Poverty offers no panacea, it does offer new tools for analyzing our goals for reading education. Undergraduate students, graduate researchers, preservice and inservice teachers, parents--indeed anyone interested in education reform will be intrigued by Shannon's new theory of poverty, which seeks to blur traditional class lines among Americans in order to direct us toward a more just and equitable society.

About the Author, Patrick Shannon

A former preschool and primary grades teacher, Patrick Shannon is currently a professor of education at The Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of nine books, including Reading Poverty (1998), text, lies, & video tape: stories about life, literacy, & learning (1995), Becoming Political: Readings and Writings in the Politics of Literacy Education (1992), and The Struggle to Continue: Progressive Reading Instruction in the United States (1990), all published by Heinemann.

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Book Details

Published
March 1, 1998
Publisher
Heinemann
Pages
230
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780325000176

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