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Book reviews for "Cipes,_Robert_M." sorted by average review score:

Master Class in Figure Drawing
Published in Paperback by Watson-Guptill Pubns (1991)
Authors: Robert Beverly Hale and Terence Cole
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Yoda personally teaches you the secrets of the Force.
Robert Beverly Hale's three books on Artistic Anatomy should be owned by every beginning and professional artist. Beverly Hale shows the reader that to become an adept draftsman,it is best to learn from the drawing masters of all time. Beverly Hale also tells the reader how the best figure draftsmaen,from daVinci to Degas,learned from the works of past great masters.

Reading and learning from Robert Beverly Hale's three books on Artistic Anatomy is like learning the ways of the Force from Yoda himself.

very comprehensive
I am currently in Figure drawing 2 and this book is a wonderful help. I have few figure drawing books that I feel compleatly happy with and this one is the best. It shows you how the masters worked with simple shapes, line, value, mass, and anatomy to represent the figure. It breaks up the chapters into body parts and each chapter deals with that specific part. By presenting works of master artists and disecting them you understand how the human form works and can be expressed. I would reccomend this book to anyone interested in drawing the figure, especially beginers.

A masterpiece of life drawing tuition
Mr Coyle has done great justice to his old mentor Robert Beverley HALE with this magnificent book. The lessons are based on Mr Hales teachings on the techniques and thinking of the great master drawers, and not only are the examples all master works, but innovative use of coloured line overlays makes sometimes difficult concepts abundantly clear. The real point of this book, as with all R.B.Hale books, is that YOU can learn to think in the same highly visually intelligent way as these greats of the past, and learn to apply that thinking to your own creations. BRAVO Messrs Hale et Coyle!


Sexual Mysteries: Tales of Psychotherapy
Published in Paperback by Orbit Publishing Company (01 April, 2000)
Authors: Joseph Glenmullen and Robert Coles
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If you want to get an idea about psychotherapy
I liked this book. I would really give it 4 and 1/2 stars. It's interesting, educational, and fun if you are the type who is curious about the psychodynamics of human behavior. Most people just want a pill to cure what ails them, but sometimes the only cure is finding out what is really going on in the mind. This book gives you some insight into that mysterious and fascinating world.

Charming and Insightful Stories
I read this book under its previous title, "The Pornographer's Grief," and am glad to see it has been re-published under the title "Sexual Mysteries" (a better description of its contents). This is a charming book of insightful stories from the author's general psychiatric practice. Each of the chapters discusses a different patient in dialogue form. While these are true stories of therapy, they are so well written they read like good fiction. They provide an unusual opportunity to look in on someone else's life and their problems, how those problems play out in their sexual life (or how they are manifested in sexual symptoms), and how the problems are solved through therapy.

For example, the chapter called "The Acrobat's Stocking" tells the story of a man's longstanding problems with using a condom. Through therapy the man discovers the psychological roots of, and solves, his problem. Some of the other chapters are titled "The Pornographer's Grief" (exploring the psychological roots of a man's addiction to pornography), "The Woman Who Thought Her Orgasm Was A Gift," "Don Juan's Regret" (about a womanizer coming to terms with his behavior), and "Sexual Appetites" (about a bulimic college student and unconscious sexual elements of her binges).

"Sexual Mysteries" is easy-reading but intellectually stimulating. I recommend it highly.

I thought about it for weeks .
As a graduate student in counseling I found this book fascinating. (It had the same effect on my fellow classmates) Many of us wrote reaction papers on different chapters plus we spent quite a bit of time discussing it in class. Initially I was shocked by the material, later I was in awe of where the counselor went with the clients.


The Spiritual Life of Children
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin Co (1990)
Authors: Robert Coles and Robert Cole
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Inner Lives of Children Skillfully Revealed
Although this book was published in 1991, the ideas, attitudes, and spiritual insights of the children interviewed are as fresh and important as when the discussions first occurred. As adults we tend to dismiss the ability of children to offer their own interpretation of the Divine. This book clearly shows that it is frequently the adults that don't "get it." I found it especially appealing that Coles did not limit himself solely to children with a Christian background. The inclusion of Muslim, Jewish, and Native American children indicates that children's spirituality cuts across religious and cultural lines. I only wish Robert Coles had included more interviews and drawings!

Theologically valuable as well
I read this book from a point-of-view more interested from a theological than psychological (not that these have to be kept separate), and I suspect that EVERYONE who studies theology could benefit from listening to children describe their own spiritualities.

Coles' narration is occasionally insightful, occasionally annoying, always self-conscious. He interviews children alone and in groups, listening and participating in their reflections and conversations. He interviews various races and religions, including chapters on Christian, Jewish, Islamic and secular children in America, the UK, Tunisia and Israel. I found his interviews with Hopi children very provocative.

The book has both intellectual and spiritual value, and I hope it is read more widely than it has been.

Children, Religion, and Science
Robert Coles' insightful study of children's ideas about God and religion also opens an important window on the question of the proper approah of science to religion. Coles appears to struggle personally with this issue, deciding in the end that the scientist may properly take a person's religious beliefs at face value. The delightful discussions with children that lead toward this conclusion make compelling reading.


The Book of Beads: A Practical and Inspirational Guide to Beads and Jewelry Making
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1990)
Authors: Janet Coles and Robert Budwig
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Can't wait to make this stuff!
This bead book is like an encyclopedia and gallery in one. I love looking through its wonderful photos of beads and jewelry, and it has added to my store of techniques and design ideas. A large section is dedicated to close-up photos of many types of beads with references to their history and cultural background. It makes me more knowledgeable about what I'm getting when I shop for beads.

The next section has a wonderful display of jewelry, mostly necklaces and earrings, in all kinds of styles, materials, colors -- from light and delicate to chunky and bold. I've gotten a lot of ideas from these to copy or create my own designs.

A section at the end explains various jewelry-making techniques with closeup photos and adequate written instructions. I think just a little prior experience would be helpful in following these fairly simple techniques. There are a couple more pages that clearly show a few methods for sewing beads onto fabric. This is a bead book I will keep returning to for browsing and inspiration.

Bead Fest for the eyes and imagination!
The information and the photography in this book is really wonderful. I refer to it time and again for information on particular beads or just to look at the wonderful pictures of beads. I love to collect beads and use them in designs. It is always enjoyable to me to just peruse this book. I would recommend it to anyone that is interested in beads,or just for information and ideas.

Look and learn...
Trying to figure out the name and history behind your most recent flea-market-find beads? Chances are the answers are in this slim, easy-to-overlook book. I've been making bead jewelry for more years than I like to admit, yet I learn something new every time I open this book. All the full-page photographs come with plenty of FYI factoids about beads, which are catagorized by type and color. I've used it to identify everything from rudraksha nuts used in Hindu prayer beads, and batik beads from Kenya, to the Italian name for my favorite African trade beads. The book isn't big on instructions. But if you are looking for ideas or inspiration, it is a wonderfully informative guide.


The Boy Who Would Be a Helicopter
Published in Paperback by Harvard Univ Pr (1991)
Authors: Vivian Gussin Paley and Robert Coles
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Book Review of the boy who would be a helicopter
After reading, Vivian Gussin Paley's book, the boy who would be a helicopter, I found it to be a very interesting account of her experiences in teaching young children. In particular, I was really impressed by the way she engaged the children in telling their stories through acting them out, since this not only allowed the children to learn, but also Paley had the chance to learn more about the children through their stories. Of all the children, Paley was primarily focused on a boy named Jason because he was so different than the rest of her children. For example, Jason refused to play with the other children and when Paley tried to get him to join the group his typical response was his helicopter is broken at which point he would rush off to "supposedly' fix it.

What amazed me throughout the book was how Paley continued to encourage Jason to join them in their storytelling and refused to give up on him. In addition, despite Jason's differences Paley never labeled him. Quite honestly, I know teachers who would have labeled or viewed Jason as being a special needs child and wanted him out of their classroom. Yet, Paley was driven to help Jason and he eventually does make tremendous progress in her classroom. Of course, Jason's level of progress would not have occurred without Paley's patience and determination along with a positive learning environment, which sends an important message to teachers. Even at the end of the book, Paley never reveals what Jason's problem is or whether she feels he is in need of some special services. To me, I definitely recommend this book to any educator especially those who work with young children, since I think Paley has a real unique way of working with children and teachers could greatly benefit from reading about her classroom experiences.


Jeff Wagner

December 18, 2002

Book Review of the boy who would be a helicopter
Book Review of the boy who would be a helicopter

After reading, Vivian Gussin Paley's book, the boy who would be a helicopter, I found it to be a very interesting account of her experiences in teaching young children. In particular, I was really impressed by the way she engaged the children in telling their stories through acting them out, since this not only allowed the children to learn, but also Paley had the chance to learn more about the children through their stories. Of all the children, Paley was primarily focused on a boy named Jason because he was so different than the rest of her children. For example, Jason refused to play with the other children and when Paley tried to get him to join the group his typical response was his helicopter is broken at which point he would rush off to "supposedly' fix it.

What amazed me throughout the book was how Paley continued to encourage Jason to join them in their storytelling and refused to give up on him. In addition, despite Jason's differences Paley never labeled him. Quite honestly, I know teachers who would have labeled or viewed Jason as being a special needs child and wanted him out of their classroom. Yet, Paley was driven to help Jason and he eventually does make tremendous progress in her classroom. Of course, Jason's level of progress would not have occurred without Paley's patience and determination along with a positive learning environment, which sends an important message to teachers. Even at the end of the book, Paley never reveals what Jason's problem is or whether she feels he is in need of some special services. To me, I definitely recommend this book to any educator especially those who work with young children, since I think Paley has a real unique way of working with children and teachers could greatly benefit from reading about her classroom experiences.


Jeff Wagner

December 18, 2002

I have a question
Love her story-telling and its relationship to teaching - I use it in my ESL classes. Is Vivian related to the short story writer - Grace Paley?


Cries From the Heart
Published in Paperback by Plough Publishing House (1999)
Authors: Johann Christoph Arnold and Robert Coles
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Comforting Words for Times of Challenge
Cries from the Heart was my first introduction to the writings of Johann Christoph Arnold. Arnold has a deep faith, which probably comes somewhat naturally to him. His father was in ministry and his grandfather began a Christian community that stood up to the Nazi regime and had to flee Germany. By training, Arnold is a pastoral counselor, but in truth he is a more than simply a therapist, he is also a believer. He shares both his ministry and faith in this wonderful book. Arnold talks about the reality of pain in our world and offers stories of people who have had to cope in the midst of great tragedy and loss. His book also offers examples of people who suffer with everyday losses and tragedy. Arnold offers hope to people whose lives have been touched by pain, suffering, and hardship, but the hope he offers is not a feel good sort of hope but the assurance that in even life's most tragic and difficult times, people can live with hope.

I began to read this book early in 2002, when the priest sex abuse scandal was first rearing its ugly head in Boston. This was a time when many people of faith had more questions than answers. Even those who are not survivors of child sexual abuse felt hurt and betrayed by all that has happened. While this book did not give answers to the crisis, it did highlight the role of faith and belief when facing life's challenges.

Hope for those who struggle
Cries from the Heart was my first introduction to the writings of Johann Christoph Arnold. Arnold has a deep faith, which probably comes somewhat naturally to him. His father was in ministry and his grandfather began a Christian community that stood up to the Nazi regime and had to flee Germany. By training, Arnold is a pastoral counselor, but in truth he is a more than simply a therapist, he is also a believer. He shares both his ministry and faith in this wonderful book. Arnold talks about the reality of pain in our world and offers stories of people who have had to cope in the midst of great tragedy and loss. His book also offers examples of people who suffer with everyday losses and tragedy. Arnold offers hope to people whose lives have been touched by pain, suffering, and hardship, but the hope he offers is not a feel good sort of hope but the assurance that in even life's most tragic and difficult times, people can live with hope.Arnold's suggestions are both practical and helpful and can easily lead a person to prayer and reflection.

I began to read this book early in 2002, when the priest sex abuse scandal was first rearing its ugly head in Boston. This was a time when many people of faith had more questions than answers. Even those who are not survivors of child sexual abuse felt hurt and betrayed by all that has happened. While this book did not give answers to the crisis, it did highlight the role of faith and belief when facing life's challenges which I found to be very helpful.

Who hasn't cried from their heart?
This book is one of my favorites by J. Christoph Arnold. The stories are all about real people that suffered extreme pain and heartache. It helped me reflect on the heartaches in my own life that I never thought I would overcome. Christoph Arnold has an uncanny way of reaching people through his books in such a simple and profound way, that he reaches our souls with his words. I have recommended this book to everyone I know!


My American Century
Published in Paperback by New Press (1998)
Authors: Studs Terkel and Robert Coles
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Very good read.
No one tells history like the people who lived it, and Terkel is a master at getting "ordinary folks" to share their perspectives with the world. If you are looking for grand re-rellings on broader issues, this is not for you. If you want to know how people reacted to what was happenening immediately around them, then you're in business, here.

This is a fine compendium, almost a "best-of" type collection, and serves its purpose well. Another strong point is that this is not a book one feels compelled to pick up and complete in a sitting or three. Rather, one can easily pick it up, put it down and then return to it weeks later, as I did.

Real People, Real History
After reading Mr. Terkel's book, I realized our great country is shaped by the average folks next door (unless you live in Beverly Hills!). I was drawn to this book in a desire to read about how average Americans live their lives and make decisions that affect us all. I get tired of hearing about the rich and famous (athletes, entertainers, etc.) who really add little to our lives. How can they relate to parents who do their best to raise children without obscene amounts of money at their disposal? I showed this book to my 80-year mother who loved it! She relayed some WWII stories of her own when she worked in Long Beach at an aircraft manufacturing firm (McDonnell-Douglas). A wonderful book...do your mind a favor and read it.

Many Voices
Terkel's genius is in letting others speak. This book is an amalgam of his other books, all "written" by average Americans who have had ordinary, yet unique, American experiences. It blends the best of his other works, including stories of the American workforce from CEO's to auto assembly line workers; oral histories of the Depression from people who remember bread lines and hunger pangs; thoughts on the division between poor and rich from the "haves" and the "have nots"; remembrances of WWII from front line soldiers and the loved ones they left behind; and reflections on racism from Black, White, and mixed race people. This book makes for excellent bedtime reading, as it is separated into five to ten page vignettes. At times, it can be infuriating, at others, it can move you to tears. This is an authentic record of being American in the twentieth century, put together by a man who shows great sympathy and affection for his subjects.


Scared Silly!: A Book for the Brave
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (2001)
Authors: Robert Coles and Marc Tolon Brown
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Review
This was a book of children's poems about things that little kids are scared of. It takes those fears and turns them into funny things for children to read. This book took a collection of poems and short story about things that many people think about around Halloween. It talks about things like goblins and scary things lurking around in the dark. This is a book that children can read and laughs about things that they think are scary.
I like this book because it gives children a way to read about things that they think are scary and realize that maybe those things aren't so scary after all. If you can get a child to laugh about something that they thought was scary then they may just be able to keep laughing about it instead of letting it frighten them. I think the person who compiled these poems and short stories into this book for child to enjoy really wanted the children to be able to laugh about these things. Many children have fears of things that can't really hurt them and this allows them to see that and laugh about it.

Are kids really scared silly?
Marc Brown's Scared Silly! features many scary poems, riddles, jokes and stories. They are by many different authors that each tells about a scary story and about how they deal with those. Scared Silly is filled with many bright and bold colors throughout the book. This coloration undermines the scariness of the book, and offers comfort to a child reading these stories. Another aspect that takes away from the book being scary is the stories themselves. The selections portray the characters as comedic. This also makes light of the fact that the book is supposed to scare little children. One of the stories called "One Hungry Monster" by Susan Heyboer O'Keefe tells of a common fear young children have. It is about monsters underneath a little girl's bed and roaming around her house. They demand food from her and mess up her house. This would normally terrify a young child, but Marc Brown offers relief trough his pictures, colors, and the outcome of the story. The illustrations on the pages of "One Hungry Monster" are very bright and colorful. They also portray the monsters as silly, with wide eyes and their tongues sticking out. An article from Time Warner Bookmark about Scared Silly says, "Marc Brown has collected an array of lovable ghosts, ghouls, and witches, not to mention a pack of deliciously horrid monsters and a parcel of cowardly bullies." When the girl gives them the food, they play with it and put it all over themselves. The end of the story offers comfort as well. Instead of the girl being scared and running away, she told the monsters that she was disappointed because they left her house in a mess. It says that the "ten sorry monsters" disappear back into the chimney. They also have sad looks on their faces, knowing they had been defeated. These things help a young reader cope with a common fear by dealing with it in a comedic manner. This way of coping with scary things seems to be what Marc Brown was going for when he wrote this book. Another story in which the comedy overshadows the scariness of this book is "Witches Four" by Marc Brown. Witches are normally scary things for a child to imagine. They have always been associated with being mean and scary. In this story, Marc Brown conveys a group of four witches doing everyday things like brushing their teeth, eating, washing their faces, and getting dressed. The illustrators show the witches as old with glasses and gray hair. They look like grandmothers, which makes them likeable. Like the other stories, this one is also filled with many bright and bold colors. The witches are smiling on the pages as well. By the time the story says that the witches are "dressed for spooking," Marc Brown has taken away the scary stereotype of a witch. The stories, poems, riddles, and jokes in Scared Silly are meant to downplay the fact that witches, monsters, sea creatures, and old people are sometimes scary to small children. An article from Time Warner Bookmark says that Scared Silly is "a collection of poems and stories designed to help young readers scale their fears down to size by laughing out loud at the things that make them scared silly." Marc Brown and the other authors use bright colors and comedic characters to offer another perspective of things that normally carry a negative stereotype.

Surprisingly good poems
These poems are great read-alouds. My 7-year-old daughter loves to hear them read and to read them herself. This book has inspired me to buy more children's poetry books. We especially love the poem "The Adventures of Isabel." This should be required reading for all little girls. My daughter, who hates and fears her second-grade teacher, was inspired and strengthened by this poem. I know we will read this book many times for a long time to come.


A Short History of Charleston
Published in Paperback by Sandlapper Pub Co (1992)
Authors: Tom Cole, M. Rita Howe, and Robert N. Rosen
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OK in parts. Dry. Lot of interesting facts.
I'm an armchair history buff, but not a historian. This book was pretty "to the point" (thus the name) and interesting from the beginning through the 19th century, but the 20th century components were not compelling to me.

The book was dry. I'd recommend it if you are preparing for a visit to Charleston -otherwise find something else to read.

A Short History of Charleston by Robert N. Rosen
I've just returned from a short visit to Charleston and Rosen's "Short History to Charleston" was a perfect comrade in preparation for the tour. His book is a fun and quick read full of all the sort of information one needs to delect in Charleston's fascinating history. Not only does it give a rather complete, albeit brief, historical account of Charleston's dramatic evolution from beginning to near present day, but every page provides descriptions of remarkable individuals or events which enhance and delight the reader's experience of Charleston's history all of which are most often embellished with remarkable illustrations. I highly recommend this book.

The book to start with if you're into Charleston
We were, there in this wonderful, historic southern gem on vacation. In a wonderful, large, bookstore, we inquired, what book if you want to learn more about the history. This is it, the local experts said.

It is, well written from the beginnings of Charles Town up to Hurrican Hugo, the prose is lively and attention keeping.

Especially to be enjoyed is the side-bar entries of primarily people and architecture which add much to the verbal discussion going on the page.

To go further in study, the author provides this wisdom: "there appear to me to be more bad books written about Charleston than just about any subject I know." So he lists those he knows are worthy and recommended on each time period. Helpful!


Worlds Apart: Why Poverty Persists in Rural America
Published in Paperback by Yale Univ Pr (2000)
Authors: Cynthia M. Duncan and Robert Coles
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another basis for false stereotypes!
This book once again takes a great minority of the Mississippi Delta and makes it look like it is stuck in slavery days! This couldn't be more untrue. I agree that the Mississippi delta is a poverty srticken area, but it is not as backwards as this book makes it seem! Duncan took a look at ONE small community here in the delta when the Delta is home to at least 4 of the largest towns in the state of Mississippi! If the book was better researched then it might be good but this book inaccurately portrays Mississippi!

Social Insurance & Economic Insecurity
The book Worlds Apart describes what life is like for people of different social classes in three different places in the United States. Blackwell* in the Appalachia, and Dahlia* on the Mississippi are two of these places where inequality is constant. Another place where Cynthia M. Duncan studies is Grey Mountain*, New England, where the opposite happens. Citizens are involved in local government; this helps to reduce class inequalities.
Duncan gets very in depth in discovering the roots of the problems of social inequality. Her research consists of visiting everyplace for an extended period of time, with dialogue from 40 of the 350 local people she interviewed in the book.
In Blackwell, she describes the everyday contempt the rich and poor hold for one another, and how neither side has any desire to meet in the middle. People in Blackwell are also distinguished by the job they hold. If you are lucky enough to hold a job, you become a "have", if you don't you become a "have not".
As the author describes, poverty and inequality situation is so drastic in Blackwell that a local pastor is forced to start weeding out candidates for Christian charity. He says everyday people come in and ask the church to pay for their groceries, gas, and other bills. Word has spread around the impoverished community about his good charity and he finds the numbers of his congregation rapidly rising. Duncan finds that experiences like this undermine community trust and reinforce community held opinions that the poor citizens scheme and manipulate the system.
Dahlia in the Mississippi Delta has similar class separation to Blackwell and contempt for one another. The book continues through Dahlia and Grey Mountain, New England. The New England section focuses on equality and civic involvement. Something unheard of in the previous two sections of the book.
The section after Grey Mountain, Northern New England is titled "social change and social policy". This section makes suggestions for solutions on how to combat the problems seen in Blackwell and Dahlia. The main point that Duncan is trying to make is that in order for real change to happen, a complete outside source is needed. One with no local ties or biases. Her suggestion is that federal aid come from the outside, where locals are unable to take advantage of aid, and aid is based on need rather than first come first served.
I suggest that before reading Worlds Apart, the reader look in the appendix and study the various trends. This will allow the reader to paint a more realistic picture of the three circumstances that Duncan describes.

* Real names have been changed

Social Insurance and Economic Insecurity

Worlds Apart: Why Poverty Persists in Rural America

In the book Worlds Apart, the author, Cynthia M. Duncan, takes a look at three different areas of rural America to study rural poverty. She studied the different aspects of the communities, including social, economic, educational and political issues. Of the three communities, two areas (Blackwell and Dahlia) have very similar profiles that have limited the people from moving upward in society. The third has a different perspective, in which the middle class is helping the whole community gain opportunities.
In the community of Blackwell, the foundation is based on the 'have' and 'have-nots'. This mining community was founded on a continual idea of separation of class. Every facet of the community depended on how much money a family had and a person's last name. The 'drawers' were the people who continually draw money from the government. They were the uneducated, poor who had only known this way of life. Outside opportunity was never able to enter the community, because the wealthy class would not allow it and wanted to keep its tight hold on the lower classes.
Dahlia is a community similar to Blackwell, unchanging classes and no opportunity. Yet, it differs from Blackwell because the poor were crippled by racial segregation that has existed since slavery. Even though the plantation work is still done by the black people, they are paid considerable low wages. The social elite control everything in the community from who is on the school board, county board and any official government offices. Any radical changes by the people, were punished by 'blackballing' any chances of future employment or service. Education was also damaged by this continual segregation. The community had two schools, the better school is were the best teachers were and the white children and the poorer school had the worse teachers and all the black children.
The community of Gray Mountain was founded on many different ethic groups. It was considered a small version of American's 'melting-pot'. The poverty here came from the decline of the mill factories employment, but community did not let this create a gap between the classes. The lower classes still associated with the middle class, it did not matter how much money a person's family had. Outside improvements were not pushed away, but welcomed into the community (i.e. unions). Education was key in this community. The poor children went to the same schools as the rich children. The adults knew that the way to improve their society was through education that would inspire mobility.
In the final section of the book, Duncan provides solutions for social change and social policy. The chief solution was education. The children from poor families may not have the moral support at home to push they upward, but that at school there would be potential for a role model. Any type of support would help a children gain the upward mobility to improve themselves.


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