Becoming a White Antiracist: A Practical Guide for Educators, Leaders, and Activists vs The Transfer Experience: A Handbook for Creating a More Equitable and Successful Postsecondary System
Overall winner: The Transfer Experience: A Handbook for Creating a More Equitable and Successful Postsecondary System
Key Differences
Product A (162036946X) is a comprehensive handbook on equity and transfer systems with a higher user rating (4.80 from 9 reviews) and a practical transfer framework; Product B (1620368587) focuses on actionable antiracist practice for educators and leaders, has more reviews (24) but a lower average rating (4.30). A is geared to higher-ed policy and transfer systems, while B targets antiracism and leadership practice
Becoming a White Antiracist: A Practical Guide for Educators, Leaders, and Activists
Practical guide for educators, leaders, and activists to become effective antiracist practitioners. Includes actionable steps and frameworks for reflection and action. Customer insight: varied reactions and engagement with the material
Pros
- practical antiracist guidance
- clear frameworks for action
- relevant for educators and leaders
- insightful for activism practice
Cons
- may require sustained effort to implement
- dense in places for new readers
The Transfer Experience: A Handbook for Creating a More Equitable and Successful Postsecondary System
A handbook focused on equity and success in postsecondary systems. Explains transfer processes, policy implications, and systemic improvements. Customer insight highlights a desire for practical, equitable guidance
Pros
- focus on equitable postsecondary transfer
- practical guidance for policy improvement
- authors with expertise in higher education
Cons
- no listed features
- no customer insights provided beyond generic text
- no price or availability information
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Stephen D. Brookfield, Mary E. Hess |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | John N. Gardner, Michael J. Rosenberg, Andrew K. Koch |
| User Reviews | John N. Gardner, Michael J. Rosenberg, Andrew K. Koch |