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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,... read more
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.
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