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Mentoring Students of Color
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As more students of color continue to make up our nation’s schools, finding ways to address their academic and cultural ways knowing become important issues. This book explores these intersections,...
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27 June 2019

As more students of color continue to make up our nation’s schools, finding ways to address their academic and cultural ways knowing become important issues. This book explores these intersections, by covering a variety of topics related to race, social class, and gender, all within a multiyear study of a mentoring program that is situated within U.S. K-12 schools. Furthermore, the role of power is central to the analyses as the contributors examine questions, tensions, and posit overall critical takes on mentoring. Finally, suggestions for designing critical and holistic programming are provided.
Contributors are: Shanyce L. Campbell, Juan F. Carrillo, Tim Conder, Dana Griffin, Alison LaGarry, George Noblit, Danielle Parker Moore, Esmeralda Rodriguez, and Amy Senta.
Contributors are: Shanyce L. Campbell, Juan F. Carrillo, Tim Conder, Dana Griffin, Alison LaGarry, George Noblit, Danielle Parker Moore, Esmeralda Rodriguez, and Amy Senta.
Price: $151.00
Pages: 166
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Breakthroughs in the Sociology of Education
Publication Date:
27 June 2019
ISBN: 9789004407961
Format: Hardcover
Juan F. Carrillo, PhD (2010), Arizona State University, is an Associate Professor at the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College. His work looks at the role of agency in historically marginalized communities, with a particular focus on Latinx students. He is the author of Barrio Nerds: Latino Males, Schooling, and the Beautiful Struggle (Sense Publishers, 2016).
Danielle Parker Moore, PhD (2015), Wake Forest University, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Education at WFU. Her work is focused on black mothers experiences in out of school programs and CDF Freedom Schools.
Tim Condor, PhD (2018), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at UNC–Chapel Hill. His work is focused on Identity Formation of Christian Social Justice Activists in North Carolina’s Moral Movement.
Danielle Parker Moore, PhD (2015), Wake Forest University, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Education at WFU. Her work is focused on black mothers experiences in out of school programs and CDF Freedom Schools.
Tim Condor, PhD (2018), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at UNC–Chapel Hill. His work is focused on Identity Formation of Christian Social Justice Activists in North Carolina’s Moral Movement.