Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us - Hardcover By Mandery, Evan - GOOD

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Item specifics

Condition
Good: A book that has been read but is in good condition. Very minimal damage to the cover including ...
Brand
Unbranded
Book Title
Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9781620976951
Subject Area
Social Science, Education
Publication Name
Poison Ivy : How Elite Colleges Divide Us
Publisher
New Press, T.H.E.
Item Length
8.5 in
Subject
Social Classes & Economic Disparity, General, Higher, Philosophy, Theory & Social Aspects
Publication Year
2022
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Author
Evan Mandery
Item Weight
0 Oz
Item Width
5.5 in
Number of Pages
384 Pages
Category

About this product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
New Press, T.H.E.
ISBN-10
1620976951
ISBN-13
9781620976951
eBay Product ID (ePID)
22050379542

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
384 Pages
Language
English
Publication Name
Poison Ivy : How Elite Colleges Divide Us
Publication Year
2022
Subject
Social Classes & Economic Disparity, General, Higher, Philosophy, Theory & Social Aspects
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Social Science, Education
Author
Evan Mandery
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Weight
0 Oz
Item Length
8.5 in
Item Width
5.5 in

Additional Product Features

LCCN
2022-025483
Reviews
Praise for Poison Ivy: "Evan Mandery's Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us offers the most systematic, highly accessible critique of elite colleges and universities that you are likely to encounter. . . . It's anything but a polemic; the author draws upon the best social science scholarship and his own research to offer an impassioned and devastating critique of the mechanisms, rationales, and concessions that elite private institutions use to justify a system that reproduces the class order." --Inside Higher Ed, Praise for Poison Ivy: "A scathing indictment of how elite colleges contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality." --Forbes "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door "A no-holds-barred take-down . . . Mandery offers a detailed and scathing indictment of how elite colleges . . . contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality. One of the best higher education books of 2022." --Mike Nietzel, Forbes.com "Lively and trenchant . . . Mandery presents his indictment with an appealing blend of storytelling and hard data." --Richard Kahlenberg, Washington Monthly "[Poison Ivy] slams the role that the Ivy League and other private universities play in perpetuating and even worsening our vast social chasms." --Will Bunch, Philadelphia Inquirer "One of several new and thoughtful books . . . asking whether it is fair that ostensibly meritocratic societies have handed such extensive power to a small clutch of academic institutions." --Brooke Masters, The Financial Times "Drawing on individual stories and fascinating data, Mandery shows that . . . so-called top schools . . . are accessible almost exclusively to the already well-off." --Mary Elizabeth Williams, Salon "Mandery lays out compelling evidence that Ivy League universities--along with peer institutions such as Stanford, MIT, Chicago, Duke, and Georgetown--propagate segregation and income inequality." --Ross O'Hara, Psychology Today, Praise for Poison Ivy: "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all. . . . Recommended for all library collections on higher education." --Library Journal "Evan Mandery's Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us offers the most systematic, highly accessible critique of elite colleges and universities that you are likely to encounter. . . . It's anything but a polemic; the author draws upon the best social science scholarship and his own research to offer an impassioned and devastating critique of the mechanisms, rationales, and concessions that elite private institutions use to justify a system that reproduces the class order." --Inside Higher Ed "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: "A scathing indictment of how elite colleges contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality." --Forbes "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all. . . . Recommended for all library collections on higher education." --Library Journal "Evan Mandery's Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us offers the most systematic, highly accessible critique of elite colleges and universities that you are likely to encounter. . . . It's anything but a polemic; the author draws upon the best social science scholarship and his own research to offer an impassioned and devastating critique of the mechanisms, rationales, and concessions that elite private institutions use to justify a system that reproduces the class order." --Inside Higher Ed "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Evan Mandery's Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us offers the most systematic, highly accessible critique of elite colleges and universities that you are likely to encounter. . . . It's anything but a polemic; the author draws upon the best social science scholarship and his own research to offer an impassioned and devastating critique of the mechanisms, rationales, and concessions that elite private institutions use to justify a system that reproduces the class order." --Inside Higher Ed "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: Next Big Idea Book Club Nominee, October 2022 "One of several new and thoughtful books . . . asking whether it is fair that ostensibly meritocratic societies have handed such extensive power to a small clutch of academic institutions." --Brooke Masters, The Financial Times "A scathing indictment of how elite colleges contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality." --Forbes "A no-holds-barred take-down . . . Mandery offers a detailed and scathing indictment of how elite colleges . . . contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality. One of the best higher education books of 2022." --Mike Nietzel, Forbes.com "Lively and trenchant . . . Mandery presents his indictment with an appealing blend of storytelling and hard data." --Richard Kahlenberg, Washington Monthly "[Poison Ivy] slams the role that the Ivy League and other private universities play in perpetuating and even worsening our vast social chasms." --Will Bunch, Philadelphia Inquirer "Drawing on individual stories and fascinating data, Mandery shows that . . . so-called top schools . . . are accessible almost exclusively to the already well-off." --Mary Elizabeth Williams, Salon "Mandery lays out compelling evidence that Ivy League universities--along with peer institutions such as Stanford, MIT, Chicago, Duke, and Georgetown--propagate segregation and income inequality." --Ross O'Hara, Psychology Today "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: Next Big Idea Book Club Nominee, October 2022 "A scathing indictment of how elite colleges contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality." --Forbes "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door "A no-holds-barred take-down . . . Mandery offers a detailed and scathing indictment of how elite colleges . . . contribute to the nation's increasing social and economic inequality. One of the best higher education books of 2022." --Mike Nietzel, Forbes.com "Lively and trenchant . . . Mandery presents his indictment with an appealing blend of storytelling and hard data." --Richard Kahlenberg, Washington Monthly "[Poison Ivy] slams the role that the Ivy League and other private universities play in perpetuating and even worsening our vast social chasms." --Will Bunch, Philadelphia Inquirer "One of several new and thoughtful books . . . asking whether it is fair that ostensibly meritocratic societies have handed such extensive power to a small clutch of academic institutions." --Brooke Masters, The Financial Times "Drawing on individual stories and fascinating data, Mandery shows that . . . so-called top schools . . . are accessible almost exclusively to the already well-off." --Mary Elizabeth Williams, Salon "Mandery lays out compelling evidence that Ivy League universities--along with peer institutions such as Stanford, MIT, Chicago, Duke, and Georgetown--propagate segregation and income inequality." --Ross O'Hara, Psychology Today, Praise for Poison Ivy: "Evan Mandery's Poison Ivy: How Elite Colleges Divide Us offers the most systematic, highly accessible critique of elite colleges and universities that you are likely to encounter. . . . It's anything but a polemic; the author draws upon the best social science scholarship and his own research to offer an impassioned and devastating critique of the mechanisms, rationales, and concessions that elite private institutions use to justify a system that reproduces the class order." --Inside Higher Ed "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, Praise for Poison Ivy: "This book shines a light on the world of elite Ivy League universities in regard to their avowed support of education for all." --Library Journal "A potent investigation into how elite colleges and universities in the U.S. perpetuate economic inequalities and fail to properly address the country's ongoing racial divide." --Kirkus Reviews "Mandery argues that the pernicious unevenness of social class at elite colleges is a blueprint for other modes of injustice. Liberal audiences may be startled to see themselves mirrored unflatteringly in these pages, yet readers must not turn away from this book's cruel awakening. A necessary read for parents, academics, college officials, and most of all the students and alumni who benefit from this tilted system." --Alissa Quart, author of Squeezed and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project "A staggering portrait of inequality in America, Poison Ivy offers poignant, lyrically written portraits of student lives on the margins of the American higher education system and a carefully constructed exposé of the fundamental myth at its heart. Through conversations with experts, bolstered by data, Mandery shows that the well-recognized inequities at American elite colleges are not the consequences of segregation and disparities of opportunities, but rather the driver of them." --Philip Dray, author of There Is Power in a Union "Beautifully written and engaging, Poison Ivy holds elite higher education accountable for exacerbating the gulf between poor and rich, black and white." --Erin I. Kelly, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of Chasing Me to My Grave "It's time to wake up and realize that our best ladders of opportunity aren't at colleges with billion-dollar endowments--they're at our publicly funded institutions." --Jack Schneider, co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes
Dewey Decimal
378.73
Synopsis
Next Big Idea Book Club Nominee October 2022 An eye-opening look at how America's elite colleges and suburbs help keep the rich rich--making it harder than ever to fight the inequality dividing us today The front-page news and the trials that followed Operation Varsity Blues were just the tip of the iceberg. Poison Ivy tells the bigger, seedier story of how elite colleges create paths to admission available only to the wealthy, despite rhetoric to the contrary. Evan Mandery reveals how tacit agreements between exclusive "Ivy-plus" schools and white affluent suburbs create widespread de facto segregation. And as a college degree continues to be the surest route to upward mobility, the inequality bred in our broken higher education system is now a principal driver of skyrocketing income inequality everywhere. Mandery--a professor at a public college that serves low- and middle-income students--contrasts the lip service paid to "opportunity" by so many elite colleges and universities with schools that actually walk the walk. Weaving in shocking data and captivating interviews with students and administrators alike, Poison Ivy also synthesizes fascinating insider information on everything from how students are evaluated, unfair tax breaks, and questionable fundraising practices to suburban rituals, testing, tutoring, tuition schemes, and more. This bold, provocative indictment of America's elite colleges shows us what's at stake in a faulty system--and what will be possible if we muster the collective will to transform it., An eye-opening look at how America's elite colleges and suburbs help keep the rich rich--making it harder than ever to fight the inequality that divides us Hailed as a "staggering portrait of inequality in America" (Philip Dray) Poison Ivy tells the bigger, seedier story of how elite colleges create paths to admission available only to the wealthy, despite rhetoric to the contrary. In a "lively and trenchant" (Washington Monthly) account, Evan Mandery reveals how tacit agreements between exclusive "Ivy-plus" schools and white affluent suburbs create widespread de facto segregation. And as a college degree continues to be the surest route to upward mobility, the inequality bred in our broken higher education system is now a principal driver of skyrocketing income inequality everywhere. Mandery--a Harvard graduate and current professor at a public college that serves low- and middle-income students--contrasts the lip service paid to "opportunity" by so many elite colleges and universities with schools that actually walk the walk. Poison Ivy is a "no-holds-barred take-down" (Forbes) that synthesizes fascinating insider information on everything from how students are evaluated, unfair tax breaks, and questionable fundraising practices to suburban rituals, testing, tutoring, tuition schemes, and more. This bold, provocative indictment of America's elite colleges shows us exactly what's at stake--and what will be possible if we muster the collective will to transform it.
LC Classification Number
LB2351.2.M245 2022

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