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Loading... A Framework for Understanding Povertyby Ruby K. Payne
None. Very eye-opening. Recommended to teachers and anyone who deals with kids and families. I'm giving this book my highest rating, not because it is perfect, not because its theories are air-tight, but simply for the effect the book had on me as an educator. I've never had a book open my eyes the way this one does. So much misunderstanding between middle-class teachers and their students raised in poverty can be undone by this book. This book helped me understand why students make some choices they make - they are working off a different set of assumptions about what life has to offer them. I have always believed that people in similar circumstances will make similar choices, it is the rare individual who swims against the current. This book helped me understand the current that students swim in, which helped me tremendously when I taught at-risk students. This book contains helpful charts and summaries to help with understanding the world of poverty along with the hidden rules of poverty, middle class, and wealth. It will give the reader a practical, real-world support and guidance to improve effectiveness in working with people from all socioeconomic backgrounds. Teaches the hidden rules of economic class and spreads the message that, despite the obstacles poverty can create in all types of interaction, there are specific strategies for overcoming them. no reviews | add a review
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Dr. Payne’s work has been criticized for “deficit thinking” and for relying on stereo-typing in describing the plight of the poor. Yet much of what she says rings true in my experience. We tend to underestimate the resilience of our poor kids and we undervalue the strength of family ties in poor communities. On the other hand, when she describes the hidden rules of the middle class and the rich, she is clearly relying on stereotypes. This raises the question: at what point does her description and analysis of kids living in poverty also rely on stereotyping?
Some of the criticism of her work comes from academics who complain of a lack of rigor in this book, even though the book is meant for a general audience. That criticism is misguided. Nevertheless, the book does not incorporate the latest findings of cognitive psychology or neuroscience, and therefore is in need of updating (