<p><b>Focusing on issues of equity and opportunity in one urban high school the book reveals how prominent American cultural values-in particular students' teachers' and administrators' conceptions of educational opportunity-undermined the education that students received.</b></p><p>This five-year ethnographic study examines issues of educational opportunity at Russell High a multiethnic school in the city of Eastown. Focusing on the beliefs and values of students teachers and administrators this study reveals how prevailing cultural beliefs the collective nature of the student population and the structure of the school system worked in concert albeit unintentionally to foster inequality. To make such an argument this study draws on American cultural conceptions of individualism and adolescence-exploring how these beliefs were manifested in classrooms in the efforts of two reform initiatives in a protest-turned-riot by African American students in spring 1969 in school assemblies and in local media-and thereby reveals how and why Russell students experienced educational opportunity in similar ways for similar reasons and with similar outcomes. Beyond exploring the cultural taken-for-granted at Russell High this study considers the implications of such understanding for promoting educational opportunity more equitably.</p>
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