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The ‘Culture of Poverty’ and Other Myths that Harm Low- Income Students by Paul C. Gorski -

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Presentation on theme: "The ‘Culture of Poverty’ and Other Myths that Harm Low- Income Students by Paul C. Gorski -"— Presentation transcript:

1 The ‘Culture of Poverty’ and Other Myths that Harm Low- Income Students by Paul C. Gorski - gorski@EdChange.org

2 2 I. What We (Think We) Know Class and Poverty Awareness Quiz –Humility is key –Cognitive dissonance is inevitable

3 3 I.Introductory Blabber: Who We Are Who’s in the room? My background and lens

4 4 I.Introductory Blabber: Starting Assumptions 1.All students deserve equitable access to the best possible education 2.Gross inequities in society and schools mean that all students don’t have equitable access (See handout.) 3.Low-income people bear the brunt of almost every imaginable social ill in the U.S.

5 5 I.Introductory Blabber: Objectives 1.Understand class and poverty in the U.S. more complexly - consciousness 2.Learn what educators can do to ensure we aren’t contributing to the inequities 3.Learn what educators can do to counter the inequities - pragmatism

6 6 I.Introductory Blabber: The Agenda 1.Introductory Blabber (in progress) 2.Stereotypes of Economically Disadvantaged 3.Key Concepts 4.The Big Picture: Ten Chairs and a Pyramid 5.Dimensions of Class Inequity in Schools 6.Shifts of Consciousness 7.Being an Anti-Poverty Educator

7 Part II: Stereotypes of the Economically Disadvantaged

8 8 II. Stereotypers Are Us Pairs: Name all the stereotypes you know about low-income people –And note where they come from

9 9 II. Stereotypers Are Us Stereotype: Laziness Ah, but: According to the Economic Policy Institute (2002), poor working adults spend more hours working per week on average than their wealthier counterparts.

10 10 II. Stereotypers Are Us Stereotype: Don’t Value Education Ah, but: Low-income parents hold the exact same attitudes about education as wealthy parents (Compton-Lilly, 2003; Lareau & Horvat, 1999; Leichter, 1978; Varenne & McDermott, 1986).

11 11 II. Stereotypers Are Us Stereotype: Substance Abuse Ah, but: Alcohol abuse is far more prevalent among wealthy people than poor people (Galea, Ahern, Tracy, & Vlahov, 2007). And drug use equally distributed across poor, middle class, and wealthy communities (Saxe, Kadushin, Tighe, Rindskopf, & Beveridge, 2001).

12 12 II. Stereotypers Are Us Stereotype: Crime and Violence Ah, but: Poor people do not commit more crime than wealthy people—they only commit more visible crime. Furthermore, white collar crime results in much greater economic (and life) losses than so-called “violent” crime.

13 13 II. Stereotypers Are Us Where, then, do these stereotypes come from, and what are their implications? …more on this later…

14 Part III Three Cool Key Concepts

15 15 III. Key Concepts 1.The ‘Culture of Poverty’ 2.Deficit Theory 3.The “Undeserving” Poor

16 16 III. Key Concept: The ‘Culture of Poverty’ What is it? Who made it up? What the research says Why it’s dangerous Where you’ve seen it in education

17 17 III. Key Concept: The ‘Deficit Theory’ Two Components Example: Payne’s reflections on Katrina (see handout) Why it’s dangerous Where you’ve seen it in education

18 18 III. Key Concept: The ‘Undeserving Poor’ Herbert Gans, The War Against the Poor Deterioration of support for policy “Welfare Reform”

19 Part IV The Big Picture: Ten Chairs and a Pyramid

20 Part VI Shifts of Consciousness

21 21 VI. Shift of Consciousness #1 Must be willing to think critically about those things about which I’ve been taught not to think critically –Corporate capitalism –Two-party political system –Consumer culture And the relationship between these things and racism –Myth of meritocracy

22 22 VI. Shift of Consciousness #2 Must understand the intersectionality of class with race, gender, disability, and other factors. –We cannot fully understand poverty without understanding how it relates to these issues. –Racism as economic exploitation

23 23 VI. Shift of Consciousness #3 Must expose and reject deficit theory and the “culture of poverty” myth –Blame people in oppressed groups for their oppression –Create hostile conditions, then demonize people for being angry or resistant

24 24 VI. Shift of Consciousness #4 Must acknowledge class-related inequities and oppressions—and understand them as systemic and not just individual acts and practices –So changing hearts isn’t enough to create equitable schools—must prepare ourselves and others to change institutions and society

25 25 VI. Shift of Consciousness #6 Must challenge stereotypes –From students, peers, parents, bosses, whoever… –And if you don’t have the information to challenge the stereotypes, then actively seek it out

26 26 VI. Shift of Consciousness #7 Must refuse to mistake socioeconomic class with “culture” –Class is sociopolitical in nature—it’s largely done to people

27 27 VI. Shift of Consciousness #9 Must be careful to avoid “saviour syndrome” or “messiah mentality” –This is an expression of supremacy and privilege –Who, exactly, is being “saved” in anti-poverty work?

28 Part VII What We Can Do

29 29 VII. What We Can Do: Fight for Poor Students Fight to keep low-income students from being placed unfairly into lower tracks. And fight to get them into gifted and talented programs. Or fight tracking altogether.

30 30 VII. What We Can Do: Teach About Class and Poverty Lack of living wage jobs Dissolution of labor unions Growing wealth gap Corporate control of government and schools Etc.

31 31 VII. What We Can Do: Take Back Our Heroes Resist whitewashing or commercialization of social justice heroes who fought for class equity –MLK –Helen Keller –Mark Twain

32 32 VII. What We Can Do: Help Students with Necessities Keep extra coats, school supplies, and snacks around. –Distribute them quietly.

33 33 VII. What We Can Do: Rethink Parent Involvement Is it equitable? Is it accessible to all parents, such as those who: –Can’t afford childcare or public transportation –Don’t have jobs with paid leave? –Work multiple jobs? –Experienced school as hostile when they were students?

34 34 VII. What We Can Do: Be Assessed Invite a colleague to observe your interactions with students and give you feedback

35 35 VII. What We Can Do: Have High Expectations Give low-income students access to high- quality, higher-order thinking curriculum and pedagogy—the kind usually reserved for their wealthier peers

36 36 VII. What We Can Do: Be Relevant Make sure examples and content are relevant to the lives of low-income students

37 37 VII. What We Can Do: Be Persistent Continue reaching out to low-income families who you experience as unresponsive—and don’t assume you know why they’re being unresponsive –We don’t make up for generations of hostility with one or two phone calls…

38 38 VII. What We Can Do: Be Thoughtful Never assume that all students have easy access to computers and the Internet –Do not assign work requiring these resources without providing in-class time to complete them

39 39 VII. What We Can Do: Don’t “Let Them Eat Cake” Fight to ensure that school lunches offer healthy options –School-served breakfasts are infamous for being unhealthy

40 40 VII. What We Can Do: Be Careful with Corporations Carefully review corporate-school partnerships

41 41 VII. What We Can Do: Use Best Practices Research has shown that there is no set of “best practices” specifically for teaching low-income students—but that “best practices” are “best practices” if we can assess where students are

42 42 VII. What We Can Do: Evaluate Materials FINALLY: Make sure your classroom or office materials or decorations do not stereotype—even if subtly—economically disadvantaged people

43 Paul C. Gorski gorski@edchange.org http://www.EdChange.org


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