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The Mind at Work: Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker

by Mike Rose

The Mind at Work: Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker Cover

ISBN13: 9780670032822
ISBN10: 0670032824
Condition: Standard
Dustjacket: Standard
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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In the tradition of Barbara Ehrenreic‛s Nickel and Dimed and Studs Terke‛s Working, The Mind at Work is an illuminating reassessment of American labor. Testimonials to physical work have always celebrated the dignity, the economic and moral value, even the nobility of blue-collar labor, but rarely the thought required to get the job done right. The lightning-fast organization and mental calculations of the waitress; the complex spatial mathematics of the carpenter; the aesthetic and intellectual dexterity of the hair stylist—our failure to acknowledge or respect these qualities has undermined a large portion of Americ‛s working population. In The Mind at Work award-winning writer Mike Rose sets the record straight by taking a long hard look at the intellectual demands of common work.

Integrating personal stories of his own working-class family with interviews, vivid snapshots of people on the job, and current research in social science and cognitive psychology, Rose draws a brilliantly original portrait of America at work. As he probes the countless decisions, computations, and subtle judgments made every day by welders and plumbers, waitresses and electricians, Rose redefines the nature of important work and overturns the“hand/brai” dichotomy that blinds us to the real contributions of working people.

About the Author

Mike Rose, a member of the faculty of the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, has written a number of books and articles on language and literacy, including Lives on the Boundary: The Struggles and Achievements of Americ‛s Underprepared.

In 1997 his book Possible Lives won the prestigious Gawemeyer Award in Education and the Common-wealth Club of California Award for Literary Excellence in Nonfiction.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Introduction: Mind and Work xiii

1 The Working Life of a Waitress 1

2 Styling Hair 31

3 The Intelligence of Plumbing 56

4 A Vocabulary of Carpentry 67

5 Reflective Technique: Electrical Wiring and Construction 100

6 Two Lives: A Welder and a Foreman 116

7 Rethinking Hand and Brain 141

8 Hand and Brain in School: The Paradox of Vocational Education 167

Conclusion: Working Life 195

Afterword: On Method 217

Acknowledgments 225

Notes 229

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:

Katherine Stuart, May 26, 2009 (view all comments by Katherine Stuart)
An excellent book. Easy to read, concise, thoughtful and thought-provoking. Rose takes us into the world of the working class and shows how much intelligence and intellect play a part in blue collar and "unskilled" work. In so many ways he articulates ideas I've had for years. It was a real treat to read someone's well-researched authenitication of the ways in which physical labor enhances one's cognitive skills. Definitely on my list of must reads.

The writing is easy to read and articulate. He elucidates his point beautifully. The two shortest chapters --one on plumbers and one on electricians -- are counterintuitively the thinnest and most strained. However both are essential to his main thesis, and their lack is due mainly to the overlap of material most of which he covers in his chapter on carpentry. It's an excellently cohesive work though and well worth the time.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9780670032822
Subtitle:
Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker
Other:
Rose, Mike
Author:
Rose, Mike
Publisher:
Viking Adult
Location:
New York
Subject:
General
Subject:
Cognitive Psychology
Subject:
Labor
Subject:
Work
Subject:
Mind and body
Subject:
Blue collar workers
Subject:
Industrial & Organizational Psychology
Subject:
Careers - Job Almanacs
Subject:
General Social Science
Series Volume:
no. 01-07
Publication Date:
20040803
Binding:
Hardback
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Pages:
288
Dimensions:
8.30x5.78x1.03 in. .91 lbs.

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History and Social Science » American Studies » General

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