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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780262260961

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Discusses the reasons behind the disproportionately low number of African American and Latino students seeking degrees in computer science and looks at the daily experiences of students and teachers in three Los Angeles public high schools to explore the extent of America's digital divide.

Winner, Education category, 2008 PROSE Awards presented by the Professional/Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers.

The number of African Americans and Latino/as receiving undergraduate and advanced degrees in computer science is disproportionately low, according to recent surveys. And relatively few African American and Latino/a high school students receive the kind of institutional encouragement, educational opportunities, and preparation needed for them to choose computer science as a field of study and profession. In Stuck in the Shallow End, Jane Margolis looks at the daily experiences of students and teachers in three Los Angeles public high schools: an overcrowded urban high school, a math and science magnet school, and a well-funded school in an affluent neighborhood. She finds an insidious "virtual segregation" that maintains inequality.

Two of the three schools studied offer only low-level, how-to (keyboarding, cutting and pasting) introductory computing classes. The third and wealthiest school offers advanced courses, but very few students of color enroll in them. The race gap in computer science, Margolis finds, is one example of the way students of color are denied a wide range of occupational and educational futures. Margolis traces the interplay of school structures (such factors as course offerings and student-to-counselor ratios) and belief systems—including teachers' assumptions about their students and students' assumptions about themselves. Stuck in the Shallow End is a story of how inequality is reproduced in America—and how students and teachers, given the necessary tools, can change the system.

An investigation into why so few African American and Latino high school students are studying computer science reveals the dynamics of inequality in American schools.
Foreword vii
Shirley Malcom
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: The Myth of Technology as the "Great Equalizer" 1
1 An Unlikely Metaphor: The Color Line in Swimming and Computer Science 17
2 Technology Rich, But Curriculum Poor 27
3 Normalizing the Racial Divide in High School Computer Science 51
4 Claimed Spaces: "Preparatory Privilege" and High School Computer Science 71
5 Teachers as Potential Change Agents: Balancing Equity Reform and Systemic Change 97
6 Technology Policy Illusions 117
Conclusion: "The Best and the Brightest"? 133
Afterword 141
Richard Tapia
Appendix A: Methodology: Process and Reflections 145
Notes 163
References 179
About the Authors 193
Index 195