Casey Stockstill is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Dartmouth College.
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"Casey Stockstill's False Starts exposes how racial inequality in the US begins in preschool. This is a thorough account of the history... [and] an enlightening study of the promises and obstacles of US preschools." - Foreword Reviews "This is a compelling study of two preschools in Madison, Wisconsin, one 95 percent white students and the other 95 percent students of color. Adeptly illustrating that the segregation of students reflects and reinforces structural inequalities of racial and class divides, sociologist Casey Stockstill provides antidotes to decrease these inequalities as we seek to expand access." - Ms. Magazine "Crisp storytelling and keen analysis... The brilliance of Stockstill's work is in how she brings readers down from the abstract to nitty-gritty reality. Whether you are a child care veteran or new to the issue, you'll walk away from False Starts buzzing with thoughts." - Elliot Haspel Early Learning Nation "False Starts is an absolutely fantastic book. Beautifully written. Exceptionally researched. Accessible to a broad audience. Casey Stockstill has made daycare a necessary part of the conversation for cultural sociologists and the sociology of education." - Shamus Rahman Khan, author of Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul's School "In this searing account, Stockstill shows how class and race inequalities are baked into children's experience of preschool, shaping the lessons they learn about insecurity, property and privilege. False Starts documents that preschools are more than just places where individual kids get what they need, but instead complex sites of group socialization." - Allison J. Pugh, author of Longing and Belonging: Parents, Children and Consumer Culture "When we think of segregated schooling, preschools are rarely top-of-mind; and yet, early childhood education is, for most children, the most racially and socioeconomically segregated schooling context they will encounter at any point in their lives. This is a must-read book for anyone who wants to understand both the necessity of universal, high-quality preschool and the challenges of getting it right." - Jessica McCrory Calarco, author of Negotiating Opportunities: How the Middle Class Secures Advantages in School "Stockstill convincingly and painfully illustrates how young children's lives are structured in unequal ways from the very start. False Starts is a much-needed and excellent addition to existing research on racism and poverty in the lives of kids and is a must-read for anyone engaged in current debates about childhood socialization, social learning, child care, and universal preschool." - Margaret A. Hagerman, author of White Kids: Growing Up with Privilege in a Racially Divided America "Stockstill's meticulous work reveals how concentrated poverty affects the distribution of time and resources in the classroom, limiting students' opportunity to learn in important ways." Highly recommended." - Maia Cucchiara, author of Marketing Schools, Marketing Cities: Who Wins and Who Loses When Schools Become Urban Amenities "False Starts provides valuable insight into the consequences of the race and class segregation that characterizes early education in the United States, and how this segregation plays out in day-to-day classroom experiences...In addition to being an important contribution to the literature on stratification and early education, it will also appeal to early education policymakers and teachers, as well as anyone with current or future preschool- aged children." - Hannah W. Espy Social Forces "False Starts covers remarkable breadth and depth...She deftly stitches together the interrelatedness between broader social structures and policies with the finer-grain, intimate phenomena of the classroom, down to the hidden action figures in children's pockets. In this way, she illustrates how micro and macro forces work to reproduce inequality in preschool." - Harvard Educational Review "False Starts does not disappoint. Stockstill offers a crucial intervention in the literature on school segregation, encouraging readers to re-examine fundamental assumptions in the field... I can't wait to teach this book in my courses on educational inequality and qualitative research methods. Both undergraduate and graduate students will appreciate Stockstill's clear argument and her engaging observations of classroom interactions." - Sociology of Race and Ethnicity

