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      Enacting a Critical Pedagogy, Influencing Teachers’ Sociopolitical Development

      , ,
      The Urban Review
      Springer Nature America, Inc

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          Dysconscious Racism: Ideology, Identity, and the Miseducation of Teachers

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            Diversifying the Teaching Force: An Examination of Major Arguments

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              Sociopolitical development, work salience, and vocational expectations among low socioeconomic status African American, Latin American, and Asian American youth.

              Structural barriers constrain marginalized youths' development of work salience and vocational expectations. Sociopolitical development (SPD), the consciousness of, and motivation to reduce, sociopolitical inequality, may facilitate the negotiation of structural constraints. A structural model of SPD's impact on work salience and vocational expectations was proposed and its generalizability tested among samples of low-socioeconomic-status African American, Latin American, and Asian American youth, with Educational Longitudinal Study data. Measurement and temporal invariance of these constructs was first established before testing the proposed model across the samples. Across the three samples, 10th-grade SPD had significant effects on 10th-grade work salience and vocational expectations; 12th-grade SPD had a significant effect on 12th-grade work salience. Tenth-grade SPD had significant indirect effects on 12th-grade work salience and on 12th-grade vocational expectations for all three samples. These results suggest that SPD facilitates the agentic negotiation of constraints on the development of work salience and vocational expectations. Given the impact of adolescent career development on adult occupational attainment, SPD may also foster social mobility among youth constrained by an inequitable opportunity structure.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Urban Review
                Urban Rev
                Springer Nature America, Inc
                0042-0972
                1573-1960
                December 2015
                August 25 2015
                December 2015
                : 47
                : 5
                : 914-933
                Article
                10.1007/s11256-015-0340-y
                a4329ac0-b90b-4aa9-8da7-6f7cbd6f43fc
                © 2015
                History

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