{"title":"《有毒的学校:纽约和阿姆斯特丹的高贫困教育》,鲍文·鲍勒著","authors":"Ariel H. Bierbaum","doi":"10.5070/bp327124505","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Toxic Schools: High-Poverty Education in New York and Amsterdam By Bowen Paulle University of Chicago Press, 2013 Reviewed by Ariel H. Bierbaum Bowen Paulle’s Toxic Schools is an often-riveting transatlantic comparative ethnography that focuses on the psychosocial dynamics of high-poverty high schools in New York City and Amsterdam. Paulle, a native New Yorker and US-trained sociologist, is a professor of social and behavioral sciences at the University of Amsterdam. His work builds not only on sociological theory, but also on public health and epidemiological research. Paulle argues that the heightened levels of violence and stress in high- poverty schools and neighborhoods are toxic to the health, well-being, and life trajectory of both students and teachers. His novel approach to toxicity offers rich material and insights for planning scholars and practitioners who work at the intersection of public health, education, and poverty studies. Planning scholars and practitioners understand that access to high-quality education, adequate health care, well-paying jobs, and affordable housing and transportation are the key components of people’s “geographies of opportunity.” While volumes of urban scholarship and policy today aim to build more equitable geographies of opportunity, this work’s focus on the metropolitan or regional scale does not allow for careful interrogation of the everyday reality of living in high-poverty neighborhoods and attending high-poverty schools. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
鲍文·鲍勒的《有毒的学校:纽约和阿姆斯特丹的高贫困教育》是一本引人入胜的跨大西洋比较人种学著作,主要关注纽约市和阿姆斯特丹高贫困高中的社会心理动态。鲍勒是土生土长的纽约人,在美国接受过教育的社会学家,是阿姆斯特丹大学(University of Amsterdam)的社会与行为科学教授。他的工作不仅建立在社会学理论上,而且建立在公共卫生和流行病学研究上。Paulle认为,在高度贫困的学校和社区中,暴力和压力的加剧对学生和教师的健康、福祉和生活轨迹都是有害的。他研究毒性的新颖方法为从事公共卫生、教育和贫困研究交叉领域的规划学者和实践者提供了丰富的材料和见解。规划学者和实践者明白,获得高质量的教育、充足的医疗保健、高薪工作以及负担得起的住房和交通是人们“机会地理”的关键组成部分。虽然今天大量的城市研究和政策旨在建立更公平的机会地域,但这项工作的重点是大都市或区域规模,没有考虑到生活在高贫困社区和就读高贫困学校的日常现实。有毒学校帮助填补了这一空白,使机会的不均匀地理分布栩栩如生,并为我们作为规划学者和实践者的方法论提出了重要问题,这些规划学者和实践者塑造了这些高贫困学校持续存在的背景和建造环境。保罗的叙述是基于他在纽约南布朗克斯担任全职高中教师和在阿姆斯特丹东南部担任兼职高中教师六年的民族志田野调查。社区和学校都高度集中了贫困学生和少数民族学生。根据Paulle的说法,在这两个地方,学生和老师都将他们的学校描述为“贫民窟”,并引用了“垃圾场”和“垃圾桶”的隐喻。鲍勒用他的引言章节从理论上和地理上为读者定位。对于那些还不熟悉奖学金的人
Toxic Schools: High-Poverty Education in New York and Amsterdam By Bowen Paulle
Toxic Schools: High-Poverty Education in New York and Amsterdam By Bowen Paulle University of Chicago Press, 2013 Reviewed by Ariel H. Bierbaum Bowen Paulle’s Toxic Schools is an often-riveting transatlantic comparative ethnography that focuses on the psychosocial dynamics of high-poverty high schools in New York City and Amsterdam. Paulle, a native New Yorker and US-trained sociologist, is a professor of social and behavioral sciences at the University of Amsterdam. His work builds not only on sociological theory, but also on public health and epidemiological research. Paulle argues that the heightened levels of violence and stress in high- poverty schools and neighborhoods are toxic to the health, well-being, and life trajectory of both students and teachers. His novel approach to toxicity offers rich material and insights for planning scholars and practitioners who work at the intersection of public health, education, and poverty studies. Planning scholars and practitioners understand that access to high-quality education, adequate health care, well-paying jobs, and affordable housing and transportation are the key components of people’s “geographies of opportunity.” While volumes of urban scholarship and policy today aim to build more equitable geographies of opportunity, this work’s focus on the metropolitan or regional scale does not allow for careful interrogation of the everyday reality of living in high-poverty neighborhoods and attending high-poverty schools. Toxic Schools helps fill this gap, bringing to life the uneven geographies of opportunity and raising important questions for our methodological approaches as planning scholars and practitioners that shape the contexts and built environments in which these high-poverty schools persist. Paulle’s narrative is based on six years of ethnographic fieldwork as a full- time high school teacher in the South Bronx of New York City and as a part- time high school teacher in southeast Amsterdam. Both neighborhoods and schools had high concentrations of poor and minority students. According to Paulle, in both locations students and teachers described their schools similarly as “the ghetto” and invoked metaphors of “dumping grounds” and “garbage cans.” Paulle uses his introductory chapter to situate the reader theoretically as well as geographically. For those not already familiar with scholarship in
期刊介绍:
The Berkeley Planning Journal is an annual peer-reviewed journal, published by graduate students in the Department of City and Regional Planning (DCRP) at the University of California, Berkeley since 1985.