Discipline Problems
How Students of Color Trouble Whiteness in Schools
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania Press
Published:7th May '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In Discipline Problems, Tadashi Dozono takes seriously the frequently overlooked critiques that students of color who get labeled as “troublemakers” direct toward their high-school education. He reinterprets “troublemaking” as an intellectual asset in classrooms where whiteness is valued over the histories and knowledge of people of color.
Angel, a Black tenth-grader at a New York City public school, self-identifies as a nerd and likes to learn. But she’s troubled that her history classes leave out events like the genocide and dispossession of Indigenous people in the Americas, presenting a sugar-coated image of the United States that is at odds with her everyday experience. “The history I learned in school is simpler,” she says. “The world I live in is a lot more complex.”
Angel, like every student interviewed in Discipline Problems, has been identified by teachers as a “troublemaker,” a student whose behavior disrupts classroom norms and interferes with instruction. But her critiques of the curriculum she’s taught speak to her curiosity and insight, crucial foundations for understanding history. Like many students who have been marginalized by systemic racism in American schools, she exposes the shortcomings of her classrooms’ academic environments by challenging both the content and the methods of her education. All too often, these challenges are framed as “troublemaking,” and the students are disciplined for “acting out” instead of being rewarded for their intellectual engagement.
Tadashi Dozono, a professor of education and former high school social studies teacher, takes seriously the often-overlooked critiques that students of color who get labeled as troublemakers direct toward their high school history curriculum. He reinterprets “troublemaking,” usually cast as a behavioral deficit, as an intellectual asset and form of reasoning that challenges the “disciplining reason” of classrooms where whiteness is valued over the histories and knowledge of people of color. Dozono shows how what are traditionally framed as discipline problems can be seen through a different lens as responses to educational practices that marginalize non-white students. Discipline Problems reveals how students of color seek out alternate avenues for understanding their world and imagines a pedagogy that champions the curiosity, intellect, and knowledge of marginalized learners.
"Discipline Problems is an ethnographic study that provides astonishing philosophical insights about the relationship between the curricular foundations of U.S. schooling, discipline, and the state. In this work, students deemed ‘troublemakers’ in high school history classes are not the problem to be studied but instead subjects offering incisive social analyses about the problems of an impoverished curriculum—indeed, an American curriculum that fails to mirror the complexity of their worlds. This book offers novel contributions to educational philosophy, critical pedagogy, curriculum studies, and more." * Jarvis R. Givens, author of Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching *
ISBN: 9781512825268
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
200 pages