Framing Dropouts: Notes on the Politics of an Urban High School (Teacher Empowerment Sch (Dis))
G**A
Very outdated and one-sided
This text provides data from the late 70s to mid 80s. While the dropout statistics reported are very unfortunate, current dropout rates have improved immensely. Also, Fine reported a few examples of bad teachers, as if they are the norm. I found the student interviews disgraceful. Fine seems to validate student's irresponsible behavior of not attending school and not completing school work through her student interviews. Many reasons students dropout are the results of our society's poverty problem. The schools cannot be held solely responsible for changing our society. Much more support is needed by our government to improve the lives of young people living in poverty.
K**N
Great transaction
Thank you. This book. Reveals the dropout factories, which results in filling up our prisons, because "if we don't educate, we will incarcerate." A very valuable resource!
A**R
Five Stars
As described
B**N
Book Review
Michelle Fine brings us a chilling ethnographic portrayal of a New York City high school from 1978 to 1985. She follows an incoming class of students and reports on their experience. She also follows the teachers and administrators who are responsible for these students. Alarmingly, two-thirds of the incoming 1978 cohort had not graduated six years later in 1985. When that many students are not graduating, it is no longer the fault of the students, but the responsibility of those in charge.The greatest strength of Fine's work is her shift in focus from the students who drop out to the systems they drop out from. By doing this, she does not fall into the trap of "blaming the victim." As a result, some of the seemingly insurmountable deficiencies students bring to school such as poverty, language deficiency, cultural depravity, lack of parental support, and family problems are no longer the focus of improving public education. Rather, the roles and functions of teachers, faculty, administrators, and public officials can be studied, scrutinized, and improved to reach better educational outcomes for urban students in public schools.Fine also does a magnificent job of using her observations and direct quotes from students, teachers, and administrators to illustrate her conjectures. For example, Fine writes about a discussion with a group of school personnel about her finding that the majority of the students at that school were dropping out. The principal stated, "We do what we are told to do by the Board" (p. 68). The attendance coordinator followed with, "We have a problem. These kids have been gone for more than twenty days, some hundreds, and that's since junior high school" (p. 68). Next, the guidance counselor added, "We do throw students out of here for no good reasons. They feel terrible. We deny them their education. Black kids especially. They care a lot. I am concerned about the kids discharged in large numbers" (p. 69). One of the deans followed with, "I have twenty-five kids graduating who have been on contract; the others, they have to go. That's how we keep control here" (p. 69). Another dean chimed in, "They don't see how dangerous these kids are" (p. 69). Finally, the dean of guidance provided a synopsis of the discussion and the situation at the school, "We are working within the school at cross purposes. And we feel the impact on the streets as citizens, we are not working as a team" (p. 69).From this conversation, we can see how different faculty members within the same school have different concerns and different visions that are counterproductive for individual student success. Fine claims, "My argument held that the structures and policies of urban comprehensive high schools require no conscious malintent on the part of individual educators to produce systematically inequitable outcomes" (p. 179). Although all the faculty members above were doing their best to serve the students without malice, the system itself was to blame for the majority of students leaving school.The only drawback to this piece is when it was written. While it was published in 1991, the ethnographic study began over thirty years ago in 1978 and finished over twenty years ago in 1985. The details of the school experience may have changed since then. However, the problem of students dropping out persists. Fine's findings may be considered outdated, but they are certainly relevant. One can only imagine how the current high-stakes accountability system impacts the systemic flaws which Fine uncovered in her study.Anyone directly involved in education, be it a teacher, principal, counselor, school board member, or city council representative can learn immensely from this text. Also, anyone who is interested in ethnographic research, urban studies, or political science would enjoy this reading. For those who believe our public school system is truly equitable and every student has an equal opportunity to succeed, this book can provide a necessary wake up call.
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