| Course Description | Being young can often mean being (or feeling) powerless, particularly within the largeinstitutions that structure youth’s lives. Couple this with experiences of marginalization due to
 race, class, gender, or other social identities, and young people may experience profound
 constraints in their choices or pathways. At the same time, youth – both individually and in
 groups – often develop strategies to resist these sources of literal and figurative confinement to
 seek out dignity, joy, and justice. Using sociological and ethnographic texts as our foundation,
 this course will explore the way experiences of confinement and constraint show up in the lives
 of young people, particularly as they move through educational institutions – and how youth
 work to resist those forms of subordination.
 In the first half of the semester, we will focus on policing and prisons and examine the ways
 schools play a role in funneling youth into different forms of confinement. In the second half of
 the semester, we will investigate college and college preparatory contexts in an effort to
 understand the ways they may constrain opportunities by creating or foreclosing particular
 pathways for students’ futures. Throughout the semester, we will emphasize the role of socially
 constructed identity categories – race, gender, class, in particular, as well as the category of
 youth itself – in these processes of confinement and constraint. We will also highlight youth and
 community practices of resistance against these social and institutional forces. Along the way,
 we will consider (and practice) the affordances and limitations of ethnography as a mode of
 social research for studying confinement, constraint, and practices of resistance in educational
 contexts.
 LEARNING OBJECTIVESThrough this course, students will:
 ● Use a range of sociological, ethnographic, and multimodal texts to analyze youth’sexperiences of confinement, constraint, and resistance (expansively defined) and the
 ways they play out in different institutional, educational, and social contexts.
 ● Explore the methodological approach of ethnography – its affordances, challenges, and
 some of the major dilemmas in the field – and practice it by conducting a series of
 scaffolded ethnographic projects.
 ● Write for multiple purposes, including exploratory and dialogic writing shared with peers
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