The mind at work : valuing the intelligence of the American worker

"This groundbreaking study finds that the intelligence, integrated skills and achievements of blue collar and service workers have been consistently undermined and marginalized by cultural stereotyping. Rose (Possible Lives) finds conventional assessment of intelligence tied to social class: to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rose, Mike
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: New York 2004
Viking Penguin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19293083124910112659-The-mind-at-work-valuing-the-i.htm
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author Rose, Mike
author_facet Rose, Mike
collection Library items
description "This groundbreaking study finds that the intelligence, integrated skills and achievements of blue collar and service workers have been consistently undermined and marginalized by cultural stereotyping. Rose (Possible Lives) finds conventional assessment of intelligence tied to social class: to IQ tests that measure formal schooling rather than capacity, and judgments that elevate "mind work" such as teaching or surgery over so-called "body work" represented by hair stylists or plumbers. Rose demonstrates, through research and personal exploration of a variety of workplaces, that cognitive ability, including perception, judgment, memory and knowledge, is employed daily in the work of laborers like welders, carpenters and drivers. He includes an extraordinarily moving biography of his mother, who used timing, concentration, strategic efficiency and a high degree of social skills in her work as a waitress. He profiles vocational teachers such as Jim Padilla, who motivates and guides his student electricians while passing on the concentration, problem-solving skills and persistence necessary to success. Rose also provides an excellent overview of the academic-vocational divide and argues that its effacement is necessary for a more democratic society. Well written and perceptive, but never dogmatic, Rose's book puts an important and generally poorly covered piece of the U.S.'s sociological puzzle in bold relief. "
format TEXT
geographic USA
id 19293083124910112659_49aac516f1244b0fa48b4efe028352eb
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19293083124910112659_49aac516f1244b0fa48b4efe028352eb
is_hierarchy_title The mind at work : valuing the intelligence of the American worker
language English
physical 249 p.
Paper
publishDate 2004
publisher New York
Viking Penguin
spellingShingle Rose, Mike
educational policy
manual worker
occupational qualification
occupational psychology
skill analysis
sociology
The mind at work : valuing the intelligence of the American worker
title The mind at work : valuing the intelligence of the American worker
topic educational policy
manual worker
occupational qualification
occupational psychology
skill analysis
sociology
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19293083124910112659-The-mind-at-work-valuing-the-i.htm