“That Doesn’t Count as a Book, That’s Real Life!”

J. Rosa
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Abstract

Chapter 6 demonstrates how students’ literacy skills are not simply erased within the school but also criminalized. Students write their identities in complex ways, highlighting the competing forces that recruit them to signal simultaneously their alignment with and opposition to the school’s project of socialization. Previous analyses of school-based socialization in urban contexts often distinguish between stereotypical “school kids” (who eventually graduate and become upwardly socioeconomically mobile) and “street kids” (who drop out and become part of the racialized American underclass). In contrast, this chapter shows how students in New Northwest High School draw on various literacy practices to signal school kid and street kid identities concurrently.
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“这不是一本书,这是真实的生活!”
第6章展示了学生的读写能力是如何在学校里被简单地抹掉的,而且还被定为犯罪。学生们以复杂的方式书写他们的身份,突出了招募他们的竞争力量,同时表明他们与学校社会化项目的一致和反对。先前对城市背景下以学校为基础的社会化的分析经常区分出典型的“在校儿童”(最终毕业并在社会经济上向上流动)和“街头儿童”(辍学并成为种族化的美国下层阶级的一部分)。相比之下,本章展示了新西北高中的学生如何利用各种识字实践来同时表明学校儿童和街头儿童的身份。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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