
This one-of-a-kind collection will help today's educators feel and understand the power that communities can harness through organizing and solidarity.
This volume highlights some of Wayne Au's most impactful essays and articles across his 25 years as an educator, activist, and scholar. In this carefully curated collection, Au traces the development of his politics and analyses of schooling, education policy, curriculum, and racialization. Featuring concrete examples, chapters address antiracist education and the politics of knowledge; the racial politics of high-stakes testing and neoliberal education reforms; and the racialization of Asian Americans as a model minority and its connection to anti-Blackness. Importantly, this book illustrates the power of writing for different audiences by placing scholarly essays alongside those written for teachers, parents, and community members, while also linking educational activism with educational research. In addition to providing a broad examination of the politics of curriculum and educational policy in America,
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