Acknowledgments
Foreword by Julia Wrigley
Social Class and Parent Intervention in Schooling
What Do Teachers Want From Parents?
Separation Between Family and School: Colton
Interconnectedness Between Family and School: Prescott
Mothers and Fathers: Gender Differences in Parent Involvement in
Schooling
Why Does Social Class Influence Parent Involvement in
Schooling?
Educational Profits: The Positive Impact of Parental Involvement on
Children's School Careers
Social Class Differences in Inter-Institutional Linkages
Appendix: Common Problems in Fieldwork: A Personal Essay
Annette Lareau is the Stanley I. Sheerr Professor in the Social Sciences and Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.
Home Advantage is already a classic in the sociology of education.
It is theoretically rich and its findings are profound. It is also
a model of excellence for qualitative research methods.
*Adam Gamoran, University of Wisconsin, Madison*
Home Advantage is a marvelous tool for teaching about both the
dynamics of school-family linkages and the realities of the process
of social research. The book invariably triggers spirited
discussions among students, and has a lasting influence on how they
think about the sociology of education and about research.
*Aaron M. Pallas, professor of sociology and education, Teachers
College, Columbia University*
Home Advantage is a superb empirical study of family-school
relations. The nuanced analysis, especially of the dynamics of
social class, has given this work the well-earned status of a
classic whose insights are of lasting value.
*Barrie Thorne, author of Gender Play: Girls and Boys in
School*
An important and timely book about the ways parents are able (and
unable) to shape their children’s educational experiences. . . .
Should be read by all current and future educators . . . required
reading for students of qualitative research.
*American Journal of Sociology*
Home Advantage is the most compelling empirical illustration I have
found of the concept of cultural capital. It is a rich book to
teach, and in the stratification course in which I used it, the
students considered it the best of the books they were
assigned.
*Doug Porpora, Department of Psychology and Sociology, Drexel
University*
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