O slideshow foi denunciado.
Seu SlideShare está sendo baixado. ×

Class in america

Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Próximos SlideShares
17.equality and equity
17.equality and equity
Carregando em…3
×

Confira estes a seguir

1 de 9 Anúncio

Mais Conteúdo rRelacionado

Diapositivos para si (20)

Semelhante a Class in america (20)

Anúncio

Mais recentes (20)

Class in america

  1. 1. Class in America ~ Gregory Mantsios
  2. 2.  The author, in the interest of exposing the truth about class in America, is uncovering statistical data and facts to show that the American class system is alive, well, and lopsided.  The social scientific approach was used to gather all of the statistics and numbers involved in this study.
  3. 3. A CLASSLESS SOCIETY?  The distribution of wealth in America is significantly imbalanced.  Society generally doesn’t acknowledge the unofficial class divides, but statistics show they are there.  The gaps between upper and lower classes is larger than it has been in history – ever.
  4. 4. “…the truth is that opportunity for success and life itself are highly circumscribed by our race, our gender, and the class we are born into.” (P. 189) This quote, in a sentence, explains what the entire study is about. If this quote holds true, it exposes the reasons behind the lack of equality prevalent in America.
  5. 5. Do these children have an equal opportunity for success? Or do you expect one to graduate college while the other struggles just to eat?
  6. 6. “People do not choose to be poor or working class; instead they are limited and confined by the opportunities afforded or denied them by a social and economic system.” (P.188) It’s contagious! Less than one fifth of men surpass the economic status of their fathers. I chose this quote, because it supports the original issue of the unbalanced distribution of opportunity, power, success and wealth in America.
  7. 7. “1.4 million (American) children experience homelessness in any given year.” (P.179)
  8. 8.  Nearly one in eight people live below the national poverty line.  There are outliers to the statistics that do make it out of poverty; however, those numbers are unfairly small. References: Mantsios, Gregory (2009). Class in America
  9. 9. • How do you define equal opportunity? • In your definition of equal opportunity, how would you say it compares to the American system as it is? • How can Americans close the ever- increasing gap between wealth and poverty?

×