1st Edition

Educating Drug-Exposed Children The Aftermath of the Crack-Baby Crisis

By Janet Y. Thomas Copyright 2004
    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is the first book to use teachers' experiences to understand how prenatal drug exposure affects children's' development , and how social construction of the problem influences perceptions within schools.

    1. Introduction Part I: Poor Urban Drug-Abusing Women and Crack Babies 2. The Policy Paradox: Responding to Prenatal Substance Abuse 3. Crack Babies and Developmental Outcomes: What Has the Research Taught Us? 4. The Politics of At Risk: Drug-Exposed Children and Educational Policy Part II: Educating Drug-Affected Children 5. Identifying a Cracked Foundation: Teacher Observations 6. Healing the Crack in their World: Education and Drug-Impacted Children Index

    Biography

    Janet Y. Thomas is on the faculty in the Department of Public Policy and Administration at the University of Rutgers, Camden.

    "At last a book that sheds light on an issue that has been the subject of confusion and distortion for years! Dr. Thomas's research provides readers with the ability to understand how children have been affected by their mother's drug addiction and how these circumstances make these children vulnerable to early school failure. She informs educators what can be done to serve the needs of these children. For those who seek more information on how to best help, this book will be an invaluable resource." -- Pedro A. Noguera, Steinhardt School of Education, New York University
    "In Educating Drug-Exposed Children, Janet Thomas begins the exploration of acres of new and important ground. Dr. Thomas opens readers' eyes to the blurred lines between a school system's academic focus and the realities of the students we are working to educate. An important book." -- Sam Stringfield, Center for the Social Organization of Schools, Johns Hopkins University