African-American Middle-income Parents

How are They Involved in Their Children's Literacy Development?

Ethel Swindell Robinson author Patricia Ruggiano Schmidt editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Information Age Publishing

Published:13th Aug '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

African-American Middle-income Parents cover

Ethel Robinson has written an amazing book. As she wisely argues, despite a rapidly growing middle and upper class, popular media and public debates continue to view African-American families from a deficit perspective. Portrayals of African-American families in newspapers, television, and contemporary scholarship tend to focus on single-parent households, low parental expectations, and lack of family involvement in schooling. The families you will meet in this book contradict these stereotypes. In carefully crafted vignettes, Dr. Robinson and paints an alternative portrait of life in African-American households. In this marvelous book, you will see eight intact families intimately involved in the academic and social lives of their children. Some volunteer in their children's classrooms; others serve as devoted tutors and mentors; still others are active advocates, arguing passionately for school services; all hold fast to the hope that their children will achieve their piece of the American dream. This book is a powerful antidote to the negative portrayals of African-American families that abound in mainstream media. It is a ""must-read"" for researchers, educators, and all who wish to look beyond and beneath the stereotypes of African-American family life.

ISBN: 9781593118297

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

104 pages