More Than Title IX: How Equity in Education has Shaped the Nation
Autor Katherine Hanson, Vivian Guilfoy, Sarita Pillaien Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 dec 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780742566415
ISBN-10: 0742566412
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 157 x 232 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0742566412
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 157 x 232 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Many Waves, One Ocean
Chapter 2: Taking Down the No Trespassing Signs
Chapter 3: Jill and Jack Go Off to School
Chapter 4: Woman as Subject
Chapter 5: What a Way to Make a Living
Chapter 6: Play Like a Girl
Chapter 7: Woman of the House
Chapter 8: Ride the Wave
Chapter 2: Taking Down the No Trespassing Signs
Chapter 3: Jill and Jack Go Off to School
Chapter 4: Woman as Subject
Chapter 5: What a Way to Make a Living
Chapter 6: Play Like a Girl
Chapter 7: Woman of the House
Chapter 8: Ride the Wave
Recenzii
More Than Title IX is the story of how our society was transformed by opening education to women, by law. Testimonies from leaders tell us what it took, and how long, to accomplish this kind of fundamental change. We also see that the real impacts of Title IX in schools would have been slower to realize without federally funded technical assistance centers. As the details show, we should never take equal opportunity for granted, and we are not there yet. More Than Title IX will significantly help us build on hard-earned progress.
More than Title IX describes the development of gender equity in education and its relationship to a cultural shift in gender roles. The resulting narrative about the dynamic process that took place between the 'ordinary' people of the movement and its institutions and laws is inspirational, and compels us to think about how to build on the lessons that were learned.
Title IX's impact on both genders, and on society as a whole, is an important focus of this volume, which merges straightforward history with firsthand accounts from those who took on the monumental task of changing politics and people in the 1960s and 1970s. Also stressed is the vital connection between women's rights and racial equality. The authors, all senior executives at the non-profit Educational Development Center, also review the changes still needed, as well as evidence of regression in American policy and culture....This volume admirably archives the testimony of brave activists, past and present, who struggle for true parity, and warns against forgetting or distorting the origins of the debate.
Placing Title IX at the epicenter of a cultural movement, Hanson, Guilfoy, and Pillai chart the ripples this key piece of educational legislation has made across the surface and substance of American life. Their smart and engrossing history registers the links between educational equality and gender equality at large, evincing how Title IX's reach has extended far beyond the classroom. By beginning at the center and moving outward, the authors probe the interconnected relationship between legislative and cultural shifts that has brought gender relations so far while still anchoring them in place. . . . Serving as an important reminder of legislation's long reach, as well as a call to innovation in multiple sectors, this book illustrates how one act and may actors can set the stage for change. It is an important text for anyone who doubts that the world without Title IX would be a starkly different place.
This valuable volume explores the impact of Title IX, the landmark education amendments of 1972, which covered many realms of academic life.... Each section contains succinct but highly useful historical analyses, followed by revealing annotated interviews with renowned and not-so-known figures whose lives have been altered by Title IX.... Recommended.
Is the glass half full or half empty when it comes to gender equity in education? This valuable and comprehensive work highlights the major transformations that have occurred since the 1970s but never loses sight of how much more remains to be done. The stories of individual activists are especially illuminating.
More than Title IX describes the development of gender equity in education and its relationship to a cultural shift in gender roles. The resulting narrative about the dynamic process that took place between the 'ordinary' people of the movement and its institutions and laws is inspirational, and compels us to think about how to build on the lessons that were learned.
Title IX's impact on both genders, and on society as a whole, is an important focus of this volume, which merges straightforward history with firsthand accounts from those who took on the monumental task of changing politics and people in the 1960s and 1970s. Also stressed is the vital connection between women's rights and racial equality. The authors, all senior executives at the non-profit Educational Development Center, also review the changes still needed, as well as evidence of regression in American policy and culture....This volume admirably archives the testimony of brave activists, past and present, who struggle for true parity, and warns against forgetting or distorting the origins of the debate.
Placing Title IX at the epicenter of a cultural movement, Hanson, Guilfoy, and Pillai chart the ripples this key piece of educational legislation has made across the surface and substance of American life. Their smart and engrossing history registers the links between educational equality and gender equality at large, evincing how Title IX's reach has extended far beyond the classroom. By beginning at the center and moving outward, the authors probe the interconnected relationship between legislative and cultural shifts that has brought gender relations so far while still anchoring them in place. . . . Serving as an important reminder of legislation's long reach, as well as a call to innovation in multiple sectors, this book illustrates how one act and may actors can set the stage for change. It is an important text for anyone who doubts that the world without Title IX would be a starkly different place.
This valuable volume explores the impact of Title IX, the landmark education amendments of 1972, which covered many realms of academic life.... Each section contains succinct but highly useful historical analyses, followed by revealing annotated interviews with renowned and not-so-known figures whose lives have been altered by Title IX.... Recommended.
Is the glass half full or half empty when it comes to gender equity in education? This valuable and comprehensive work highlights the major transformations that have occurred since the 1970s but never loses sight of how much more remains to be done. The stories of individual activists are especially illuminating.