Three to Get Ready: The Education of a White Family in Inner City Schools

Summary
How do our schools take bright, active, ordinary children, who happen to be poor and black, and turn them into ill-educated and violent delinquents? Lois Stalvey’s book will show you how it is done. In 1962, the Stalveys, a middle-class white family, moved from Omaha to an integrated urban neighborhood in Philadelphia, where the three children enrolled in public schools. For twelve years, Lois Stalvey watched her children and their predominantly African American classmates as both a parent and a volunteer teacher. What she saw was shocking. When her own children misbehaved or had learning problems, they were granted patience and understanding. In contrast, African American children were treated, by both black and white teachers, as naughty, dangerous, obstinate, or stupid. Though more than twenty years have passed since the first publication of this book, the tragedy is that the message Lois Stalvey shares with her readers can only be more important today. “Why bother moving children’s bodies around to achieve integrated education,” she asks, “if, like the children in our school, they cannot escape teachers with segregating eyes?”
Similar Books
-
Kwanzaa and Me: A Teacher’s Story
by Vivian Gussin Paley
-
Kwanzaa and Me: A Teacher's Story
by Vivian Gussin Paley
-
-
-
Appalachian Women
by Nedra Skaggs Atwell
-
How Public Schools Fail Black Boys: And What Their Parents Must Do To Help Them
by Augustus Corbett
-
Eleven Black Kids And an Old White Man
by Michael Dunne Healy
-
-
Cultural Conflict and Struggle: Literacy Learning in a Kindergarten Program
by Patricia Ruggiano Schmidt