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CLASS DISMISSED by Anthony Abraham Jack Kirkus Star

CLASS DISMISSED

When Colleges Ignore Inequality and Students Pay the Price

by Anthony Abraham Jack

Pub Date: Aug. 13th, 2024
ISBN: 9780691237466
Publisher: Princeton Univ.

A scholarly investigation of diverse college students’ experiences when campuses closed during the pandemic.

As a first-generation college student, Jack, a professor of higher education leadership and the author of The Privileged Poor, knows just how difficult it can be to be a Black, working-class undergraduate, both from his personal experience and his scholarly research. When college campuses shut down in 2020, the author—with the help of research assistants—began the process of interviewing 125 “Asian, Black, Latino, Mixed, Native, and White” Harvard undergraduates about their pandemic-related hiatuses. The trends that emerged from this research highlighted the disparities between students of different races and classes during this troubling time. For example, Jack found that while wealthy students used their time off campus to travel and participate in career-boosting, unpaid internships, working-class students scrambled to supplement vital lost income and to balance academic work with unpaid labor, sometimes while coping with dangerous home lives. In another example, the author uncovers how wealth did not always mitigate harm: While wealthy white students enjoyed outdoor spaces during the pandemic, students of color often lived in fear of leaving their homes, regardless of their economic privilege. Jack’s findings troubled colleges’ celebrations of the unprecedented diversity of incoming classes, begging the question, “Do colleges know how to support a diverse class of students, or do they just know how to foot the bill for one?” Jack’s findings are sobering, well supported, and trenchantly reported. His sampling is particularly impressive, encompassing students from a variety of race and class combinations rarely seen in educational research. For example, he writes that he and his research assistants “interviewed nearly all the students at Harvard who identified as Native.” His compassionate, conversational tone renders this a compulsively readable, powerfully argued book.

A stunning analysis of the effects of Covid-era campus closings on diverse student populations.