(Name-mce) ListServ 10 Most Important Books: Poll

Laliberte, Matthew Dana mdl at WPI.EDU
Mon Nov 27 08:24:24 EST 2006


I look forward to seeing the comprehensive list!

In no particular order...

1. The Manufactured Crisis: Myths, Fraud, and the Attack on America's Public
Schools - David Berliner & Bruce Biddle
2. The Dreamkeepers: Successful Teachers of African-American Children -
Gloria Ladson-Billings
3. Pedagogy of the Oppressed - Paulo Freire
4. High Stakes Education: Inequality, Globalization, and Urban School Reform
- Pauline Lipman
5. Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools - Jonathan Kozol
6. Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom - bell hooks
7. Walking the Road: Race, Diversity, and Social Justice in Teacher Education
- Marilyn Cochran-Smith
8. Becoming a Critical Educator: Defining a Classroom Identity, Designing a
Critical Pedagogy - Patricia Hinchey
9. Empowering Education: Critical Teaching for Social Change - Ira Shor
10. Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other
Conversations about Race - Beverly Daniel Tatum

And I'd like to plug Deborah Stone's "Policy Paradox: The Art of Political
Decision Marking," which has enabled me time and again to frame many of the
issues addressed in my list.

Matt Laliberte
Boston College
Ph.D. Student

-----Original Message-----
From: name-mce-bounces at nameorg.org [mailto:name-mce-bounces at nameorg.org] On
Behalf Of Paul C.Gorski
Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 10:12 PM
To: mcp at edchange.org
Cc: name-mce at nameorg.org
Subject: (Name-mce) ListServ 10 Most Important Books: Poll

Hello, friends.
 
I'm doing a bit of a poll. It's very simple. Please send me what you believe
to be the 10 (or up to 10) most important books related to equity, social
justice, and/or multicultural education. Please send the book title and
author name. 
 
Feel free to think outside the box. The books don't have to be about
education explicitly and they don't even have to be non-fiction. But I'm
hoping for books that push boundaries, that aren't, in essence, "soft,"
celebrating diversity sorts of things.
 
As an example, I'm listing 5 of the books that have been most inspirational
to my work below.
 
Thanks for your input,
 
Paul
 
1. Borderlands: La Frontera by Gloria Anzaldua
2. Multicultural Education as Social Activism by Christine Sleeter
3. John Brown by W.E.B. DuBois
4. The Critical Pedagogy Reader by Antonia Darder (Ed.)
5. Global Critical Race Feminism: An International Reader by Adrien
Katharine Wing (Ed.)
 
 
 
********
Paul C. Gorski
EdChange: http://www.EdChange.org <http://www.edchange.org/> 
Multicultural Pavilion: http://www.EdChange.org/multicultural
Social Justice Store: http://www.cafepress.com/edchange
Multicultural Poster Store: http://www.EdChange.org/posters
SoJust Civil Rights History: http://www.SoJust.net <http://www.sojust.net/> 
 
 
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