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Genre/Form: | Electronic books |
---|---|
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Alexandra Robbins |
ISBN: | 9781401302023 1401302025 9781401303778 1401303773 9781401310776 140131077X |
OCLC Number: | 641534585 |
Description: | x, 436 pages ; 24 cm |
Details: | Requires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 4599 KB). |
Contents: | Prologue -- 1. Meet the cafeteria fringe -- Late summer to early fall : the popularity myth. 2. Quirk theory and the secret of popularity -- 3. Why are popular people mean? -- Fall : why quirk theory works. 4. In the shadow of the freak tree -- 5. It's good to be the cafeteria fringe -- Winter : outcast profiling and other dangers. 6. Challenges -- 7. Misperceptions -- Late winter to early spring : being excluded doesn't mean that anything's wrong with you. 8. A brief introduction to group psychology -- 9. Why labels stick : the motivations of the normal police -- Spring : quirk theory's origins : why these issues are hardest in school. 10. Changing perceptions -- 11. Two steps forward, one step back -- Late spring to early summer : popular vs. outcast. 12. Popularity doesn't lead to happiness -- 13. The rise of the cafeteria fringe -- 14. Cafeteria fringe : lucky and free. |
Responsibility: | Alexandra Robbins. |
More information: |
Abstract:
In her book, Alexandra Robbins explores the ways group identity theories play out among cliques - and the students they exclude. She reveals the new labels students stick onto each other today, the long-term effects of this marginalization, and the reasons students falling under these categories are often shunned.
Reviews
WorldCat User Reviews (1)
Don't let the title dissuade you
If you're a cynic or a pessimist (some might say realist) like me, you might be inclined to skip this book. The title might strike you as Pollyannish. After all, given the horrors in our world, it is clear that geeks haven't inherited it yet. And not all outsiders thrive after high school. In fact,...
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If you're a cynic or a pessimist (some might say realist) like me, you might be inclined to skip this book. The title might strike you as Pollyannish. After all, given the horrors in our world, it is clear that geeks haven't inherited it yet. And not all outsiders thrive after high school. In fact, a lot of us don't thrive at all. And if you were a geek in high school, there's a good chance that reading this book will dredge up a lot of bad memories. I know it did for me.
All that said - I strongly recommend this book. It needs to be spread far and wide. The stories are real and they are deeply moving. Every parent - every teacher - every administrator - every librarian - everyone who works with school-age children needs to read this. Maybe then we'll finally put an end to the bullying.
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Similar Items
Related Subjects:(15)
- Group identity.
- Conformity.
- Social isolation.
- Middle school students.
- High school students.
- Social Identification
- Social Conformity
- Social Isolation
- Identité collective.
- Conformisme.
- Isolement social.
- Élèves d'école moyenne.
- Élèves du secondaire.
- group identity.
- Loneliness.
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