
Description
Risky Lessons brings readers inside three North Carolina middle schools to show how students and teachers support and subvert the official curriculum through their questions, choices, viewpoints, and reactions. Most important, the book highlights how sex education's formal and informal lessons reflect and reinforce gender, race, and class inequalities.
Ultimately critical of both conservative and liberal approaches, Fields argues for curricula that promote social and sexual justice. Sex education's aim need not be limited to reducing the risk of adolescent pregnancies, disease, and sexual activity. Rather, its lessons should help young people to recognize and contend with sexual desires, power, and inequalities.
Product Details
Publisher | Rutgers University Press |
Publish Date | June 03, 2008 |
Pages | 224 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780813543352 |
Dimensions | 9.0 X 6.6 X 0.5 inches | 0.7 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
-- "Feminist Teacher" (1/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
"An engaging feminist ethnography. Risky Lessons is the first to examine not only the debates, but also how sex education policy is translated into district-wide cuirricula and implemented (or not) in the classroom. Fields' unflinchingly critical, feminist perspective, combined with her determination to advocate for social and sexual justice in sex education, makes for a vividness and urgency that is utterly compelling. Everyone should read this brave book."-- "Sex Roles" (2/4/2009 12:00:00 AM)
"In an elegant, candid, and rich qualitative study set in three North Carolina schools, Fields argues that the denial of young people's sexualities is at the heart of school based sex education. Utilizing a feminist analysis, the author deftly describes the constituencies, policies, issues, and people involved in the everyday controversies of sex education. Highly recommended."-- "Choice" (1/1/2009 12:00:00 AM)
"Intellectually thrilling, politically timely, theoretically strong and ethnographically elegant, Risky Lessons reveals the problematic effects of abstinence-only education and profound social inequalities, and the social dangers that mutate at their nasty intersection. At the same time, Fields demonstrates the power and urgency of teaching for desire, sexual subjectivity, safety and pleasure."--Michelle Fine "co-author, Muslim American Youth: Understanding Hyphenated Identities" (1/18/2008 12:00:00 AM)
"Jessica Fields casts a critical lens on the contentious national debates surrounding the content and form sex education should have in public schools. Risky Lessons is one of those few books whose values lies in the possibility of genuine change in policy and practice."-- "American Journal of Sociology" (1/1/2010 12:00:00 AM)
"Smart, passionate and engaging, Risky Lessons throws open the classroom door to show the high stakes for teachers and students in our political battles over sex education. It should be required reading for every U.S. politician."--Janice M. Irvine "author of Talk About Sex: The Battles over Sex Education in the United States" (2/28/2008 12:00:00 AM)
"Topical, important, interesting, and accessible, Fields's book will appeal to a wide audience of sociologists and educators."--Christine L. Williams "University of Texas at Austin"
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