Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap Third Edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x156 mm
  • Sari: Multicultural Education Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807783625
  • ISBN-13: 9780807783627
  • Formaat: Hardback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x156 mm
  • Sari: Multicultural Education Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807783625
  • ISBN-13: 9780807783627
This influential book describes the knowledge and skills teachers, school administrators, and other educators need to combat the bias and inequity that deny students experiencing poverty the levels of educational access and opportunity their wealthier peers often enjoy.

Written in an engaging, conversational style that makes complex concepts accessible and actionable, this book will help readers learn how to identify and eliminate even the subtlest inequities in their classrooms, schools, and districts. The third edition features extensive revisions based on the most recent research and lessons learned from the authors professional development work. Enhancements include an extended summary of Gorskis equity literacy framework; several new narrative case scenarios; a new section detailing how schools unintentionally punish poverty; a revised Poverty Awareness Quiz; and updated strategies throughout to assist todays K12 teachers, school administrators, counselors, and social workers.

Book Features:







Offers a research-informed alternative to popular books about poverty and education that focus on adjusting something about students experiencing poverty rather than making classrooms and schools more equitable. Describes evidence-based strategies and practices that strengthen equitable education access for students experiencing poverty. Incorporates narrative case scenarios that help readers practice recognizing subtle bias and inequity in common viewpoints and programs. Embraces an intersectional view of poverty and class by addressing how it interacts with race, gender, sexual orientation, and other dimensions of identity and experience.
Contents

Series Foreword James A. Banks xiii



Acknowledgments xix



1. Introduction 1

A Place to Start: Important Shifts in Understanding 3

Definitions and Distinctions 8

The Remainder of the Book 12

Reflection Questions and Exercises 13



2. Imagining Equitable Classrooms and Schools for Students Experiencing
Poverty: An Equity Literacy Approach 14

Introducing Equity Literacy 20

Frameworks That Help Inform Equity Literacy 23

What the Equity Means in Equity Literacy 24

The Five Abilities of Equity Literacy 28

Equity Literacy Principles for Educators 33

Conclusion 43

Reflection Questions and Exercises 43



3. The Economic Injustice Mess Were In: A Class and Poverty Primer 44

Poverty Awareness Quiz 44

An Introduction to Poverty, Wealth, and Economic Inequality 47

The Unequal Distribution of Poverty 54

Conclusion 62

Reflection Questions and Exercises 63



4. Ditching Deficit Ideology and Quitting Grit: Embracing a Structural
View of Poverty and Education 64

Poverty Attribution and the Importance of Ideology 64

The Dangers of Deficit Ideology 69

Meet Deficit Ideologys Cousin, Grit 70

The Hope of Structural Ideology 73

An Exercise in Structural Framing and Language 75

Conclusion 77

Reflection Questions and Exercises 77



5. The Misunderstandings and Myths That Misdirect Equity Efforts in
Schools 79

Debunking the Culture of Poverty and Other Absurd Notions 81

A Hint of Truth? The Nature of Poverty Stereotyping 83

Misperceivers Are We: Questioning Common Stereotypes About Families
Experiencing Poverty 86

The Dangers of Stereotypes 96

Conclusion 97

Reflection Questions and Exercises 98



6. Class Inequities Beyond School Walls and Why They Matter at School 99

The Unlevel Playing Field of Poverty 101

Why the Achievement Gap Is Really an Opportunity Gap 114

Conclusion 115

Reflection Questions and Exercises 116



7. How Schools Punish Poverty: Learning to Recognize the Achievementer,
OpportunityGap 117

How Schools Punish Poverty: The Great Unequalizer? 120

Opportunity Gaps, Neoliberal School Reform, and Attacking DEI 133

Conclusion 137

Reflection Questions and Exercises 138



8. Teaching Students Experiencing Poverty in Effective, Equitable, and
Even Data-Informed Ways: Curricular and Pedagogical Strategies 139

A Couple Caveats 139

Instructional Strategies That Work 140

Conclusion 162

Reflection Questions and Exercises 163



9. The Mother of All Strategies: Nurturing Equity-Informed Relationships
With Students and Families 164

Equity-Informed Relational Commitments 165

Conclusion 180

Reflection Questions and Exercises 180



10. Cultivating School Change Through Equity Literacy: Commitments and
Strategies for School and District Leaders 182

Shaping Institutional Culture Around an Ethic of Equity 184

Cultivating Equity Literacy in Faculty and Staff 188

Creating Policies and Practices to Redistribute Access and Opportunity 193

Conclusion 197

Reflection Questions and Exercises 197



11. Expanding Our Spheres of Influence: Advocating Change for the
Educational and Societal Good 199

Policy Advocacy for Educational Equity 200

Policy Advocacy for Societal Justice 204

Conclusion 206

Reflection Questions and Exercises 207



Conclusion 208



References 213



Index 245



About the Author 261
Paul C. Gorski is the founder of the Equity Literacy Institute and The Art of Reach. He is an author and educator who has worked with schools in 48 states and more than a dozen countries.