Minorities and Girls in School
Effects on Achievement and Performance
Edited by:
- David H. Johnson - Penn State Erie, The Behrend College
Volume:
1
Series:
Leaders in Psychology series
Leaders in Psychology series
Other Titles in:
Gender & Sexuality Studies (General)
Gender & Sexuality Studies (General)
September 1997 | 160 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
In this book, four psychologists use scientific inquiry to understand what helps and what hinders the academic and life performance of minority students and girls in the United States, asking questions such as: What has desegregation accomplished? Can performance at school be enhanced by facilitating improvements in parent-child interactions? Why are levels of achievement in mathematics and science low for girls and minorities? What stops women and minorities from choosing and completing degrees in science and engineering?
Each chapter communicates a vital area of scientific investigation to politicians and policymakers who are invited to think and act upon these anomalies, which show no sign of diminishing.
Joan Ward Schofield
School Desegregation Forty Years after Brown V Board of Education
Diane T Slaughter-Defoe
Ethnicity, Poverty and Children's Educability
Jacquelynne Eccles
User Friendly Science and Mathematics
Nancy Betz
What Stops Women and Minorities from Choosing and Completing Majors in Science and Engineering?