47 pages • 1 hour read
How might discipline practices in schools reflect and reproduce larger social inequalities around race, gender, and class? What changes could make school culture more just and inclusive?
How do Sean’s and Marcus’s bids for power at Crossroads Elementary illustrate William Ayers’s argument that “disrupting order” is a way for children to be heard? Do their attention-seeking strategies achieve voice and visibility?
Discuss the conceptions of difference that underlie how educators identify, pathologize, and punish “troublemakers.” What stereotypes and implicit biases might teachers carry?
Assess how focusing on systemic issues, not individual deficits, transforms our view of ADHD diagnoses and medications for students like Lucas and Sean. What cultural factors and environmental triggers exacerbate their restless intensity?
Contrast Kate and Emily’s caregiving approaches. How does Kate’s empathy, patience, and reasoning with Sean model more compassionate norms than school culture allows? What institutional pressures constrain Emily?
Consider the metaphor of canaries in the coal mine. Why does Shalaby use this language to describe the students she profiles?
Compare Troublemakers to another text detailing interior lives of defiant children (e.g., Milner’s Start Where You Are, But Don’t Stay There). How do sociopolitical contexts shape their resistance and its consequences?
How does Troublemakers model the concept of “portraiture” as methodology that Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot says “combines systematic, empirical description with aesthetic expression” (Lawrence-Lightfoot, Sara, and Jessica Hoffman Davis. The Art and Science of Portraiture. Jossey-Bass, 1997, p. 3)? Where does Shalaby blend art and science in her analysis?
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