Description
CHANGE! A Student Guide to Social Action helps students learn how to bring about the change they believe will improve their community. What distinguishes an experiential social action class from other social change courses is that students are actively involved in enacting a policy change of their choice, providing first-hand experience of democracy and power. Students can choose to start a new campaign, keep a campaign going from a previous semester, or join a community campaign.
This valuable new edition includes updates to the student vctories section, reordering and updating of chapters for better student learning, and updates to all of the portfolio assignments.Author: Scott Myers-Lipton
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 03/22/2023
Pages: 156
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.48lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.34d
ISBN13: 9781032418025
ISBN10: 1032418028
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Methodology
- Social Science | Sociology | General
- Education | Schools | Levels | Higher
About the Author
Dr. Scott Myers-Lipton is Professor of Sociology at San José State University, and is the author of CHANGE! A Guide to Teaching Social Action (Routledge 2022), Ending Extreme Inequality: An Economic Bill of Rights Approach to Eliminate Poverty (Routledge 2015), Rebuild America: Solving the Economic Crisis through Civic Works (Paradigm 2009), and Social Solutions to Poverty: America's Struggle to Build a Just Society (Paradigm 2006), as well as numerous scholarly articles on racism, education, and civic engagement. Along with his students, he co-founded the successful effort to raise the minimum wage in San José from $8 to $10, the modernization of San José's business tax, and the Gulf Coast Civic Works Campaign, an initiative to develop 100,000 prevailing wage jobs for local and displaced workers after Hurricane Katrina. He has worked to help students develop solutions to poverty by taking them to live at homeless shelters, the Navajo and Lakota nations, the U.S. Gulf Coast, and Kingston, Jamaica. Scott Myers-Lipton is the recipient of the Manuel Vega Latino Empowerment Award, San José/Silicon Valley NAACP Social Justice Award, the Elbert Reed Award from the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Association of Santa Clara County, the Change Maker Award from the Silicon Valley Council of Nonprofits, the Teaching Effectiveness Award from the SJSU College of Social Sciences, and the SJSU Distinguished Service Award. In addition, he serves as an Advisory Board Member of the SJSU Human Rights Institute. He lives with his wife, Diane, in San José, and they are the proprietors of the Sequoia Retreat Center.
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