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Equity Training and Development |
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Closing the Achievement Gap: A Vision for
Changing Beliefs and Practices
Edited by Belinda
Williams
ASCD, 1996
ISBN: 0871202735 |
This is an extremely useful and
timely collection of chapters commissioned
by the Urban Education National Network to:
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Define the nature of obstacles to urban academic
performance. We must clarify deterrents to
the development of urban lifelong learning
such as the lack of curriculum relevance and
authenticity, and describe supportive environments,
appropriate staff development, and meaningful
instruction and assessments for urban students.
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Identify validate, and disseminate a knowledge
base of theory and practice that will better
inform decision making relevant to overcoming
these performance obstacles.
The book addresses the nature of the achievement
gap; how urban schools can bridge it; cultural
values in learning and education; educating
teachers to close the achievement gap; appropriate
learning opportunities, standards and assessment;
fostering resiliency in urban schools; how
to catalyze teacher engagement and real reforms;
and designing a social vision for urban education. |
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Culturally Responsive Teaching:
Theory and Practice
by Geneva Gay
Teachers College Press, 2000
ISBN: 0-8077-3955-3 |
Geneva Gay is Professor of Education
and Associate of the Center for Multicultural
Education at the University of Washington. In
this excellent, informative book about meeting
the education needs of diverse populations of
students, the author discusses the challenges
as well as the possibilities of culturally responsive
pedagogy. She considers students1 emotional needs
as well in her discussion of caring teaching,
and describes differences in communication among
different genders and ethnic groups.
Excellent chapters on cultural congruity in teaching
and learning discuss different learning styles
and teaching strategies to reach and teach all
students as well as the importance of teacher
attitudes and expectations. Gay has included
many personal stories in her scholarly and interesting
analysis of this important topic. All who teach
in today's culturally diverse classrooms will
find it valuable to keep this book close at hand. |
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Other People's Children:
Cultural Conflict in the Classroom
by Lisa D. Delpit New Press, 1996 ISBN 1565841808
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MacArthur Award-winning
author Lisa D. Delpit suggests that many of the
problems students of color encounter in school
are cross-cultural, the result of miscommunication
between teachers and "other people's" children.
In a radical analysis of contemporary classrooms,
she develops ideas about ways teachers can be
better "cultural transmitters." Delpit
also addresses the origins of these problems
in the recruitment process, graduate school training,
teaching supervision, and professional advancement
of teachers of color.
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Delpit poses an urgent question: Why do we have
such a hard time making school a happy place
for poor children and children of color? She
suggests answers with honesty and compassion.
This book helped me reach across the gulf between
cultures. I hope other teachers will have a similar
reaction."—Vivian Gussin Paley, The
University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, author
of White Teacher and Kwaanza and Me: A Teacher's
Story
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[Other People's Children] provides an important,
yet typically avoided, discussion of how power
imbalances in the larger U.S. society reverberate
in classrooms."—Harvard Educational
Review
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Phenomenal. . . Reading it feels like a breath
of fresh air in an increasingly polluted world.
Without works like this, those of us who are
struggling to change our schools (as well as
our society) would be unable to breathe."—San
Francisco Review of Books |
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Creating Culturally Responsive
Classrooms
by Barbara J. Shade, Cynthia Kelly,
and Mary Oberg American Psychological Association,
1997 ISBN: 1557984077
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| Drawing on cognitive
and educational research along with specific
information about different ethnocultural groups,
this book explores the different cultures, styles
of learning, and styles of behavior that today's
teachers will encounter among their students.
This book is a much-needed contribution to Equity
studies and a handy guide for teachers at all
levels, in all subjects. |
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Why Are All the Black Kids
Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? : And Other
Conversations about Race
By Beverly Daniel
Tatum, PH.D. Basic Books, 2003
ISBN: 0465083617
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Race identity is a
positive developmental factor for young people
of color, according to psychologist Beverly Daniel
Tatum, Ph.D. A renowned authority on the psychology
of racism, she asserts it is all right, even
necessary, for black adolescents to have a strong
sense of belonging, even if it requires a period
of segregation. Using real-life examples and
a conversational tone, Tatum takes this issue
to the grassroots level.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
In "Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together
in the Cafeteria?" And Other Conversations
About Race, Dr. Tatum provides us with a new
way of thinking and talking about race through
the lens of racial identity. She explains that
all of us have a racial identity and must strive
to affirm it. For people of color, the development
of a constructive racial identity requires being
able to recognize and reject the bombardment
of negative stereotypes and to embrace a history
of resistance and empowerment rather than passive
victimization. For Whites, the challenge is to
engage in a process of racial identity development
which leads to an awareness of White privilege
and a determination to actively work against
injustice - and this requires the strength to
reject a system that rewards them, and to reclaim
the legacy of White allies. For many, this is
uncharted territory. This book provides a road
map for those who want to make the journey and
better understand the racial dynamics of their
daily lives. Tatum extends her ideas about racial
identity development beyond the usual Black-White
paradigm to embrace the unique circumstances
of Latinos, American Indians, Asians, as well
as biracial youth. Also included is a list of
resources for further reading as well as a list
of books for parents and teachers to recommend
to children of all ages. Using real-life examples
and the latest research, Tatum presents strong
evidence that straight talk about our racial
identities - whatever they may be - is essential
if we are serious about facilitating communication
across racial and ethnic divides. |
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The Dreamkeepers: Successful
Teachers of African American Children
Gloria Ladson-Billings Jossey-Bass, 1997
ISBN: 0-7879-0338- 8
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
Education, like electricity, needs a conduit,
a teacher, through which to transmit its power--i.e.,
the discovery and continuity of information,
knowledge, wisdom, experience, and culture.
Through the stories and experiences of eight
successful teacher-transmitters, The Dreamkeepers
keeps hope alive for educating young African
Americans.
--Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, president and founder,
National Rainbow Coalition
In this beautifully written book Ladson-Billings
illustrates the inspiring influence of a select
group of teachers who keep the dreams alive for
African American students.
?Henry M. Levin, David Jacks professor of Higher
Education, Stanford University
Ladson-Billing's portraits, interwoven with personal
reflections, challenge readers to envision intellectually
rigorous and culturally relevant classrooms that
have the power to improve the lives of not just
African American students but all children. |
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The Spirit Catches
You and You Fall Down—A Hmong Child,
Her American Doctors, and the Collision
of Two
Cultures
by Anne Fadiman Noonday Press, 1997
ISBN: 0374525641
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| The first half of
the title of Anne Fadiman’s "The Spirit
Catches You and You Fall Down—A Hmong Child,
Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two
Cultures" refers to epilepsy in the language
of the Hmong. The central individual in this
meticulously researched and beautifully written
book is the beloved young epileptic daughter
of a Hmong refugee family. In the weaving of
Lia Lee’s story, the author also describes
the history of the Hmong, leading up to their
role as counter insurgents in the War in Vietnam
and their subsequent emigration to the United
States. It’s the story of a people who
against all odds struggle to retain their cultural
values and traditions. The tragic clash of cultures
in the treatment of Lia’s epilepsy exemplifies
the chasm between Eastern and Western medicine.
At the back of the book is a Reader’s Guide,
including questions and subjects for discussion.
(Thought-provoking questions for the classroom)
The book won the National Book Critics Circle
Award. |
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Beyond Heroes and Holidays:
A Practical Guide to K-12 Anti-Racist, Multicultural
Education and Staff Development
Edited by Enid
Lee, Deborah Menkart, and Margo Okazawa-Rey
Network of Educators on the Americas with support
from the Humanities Council of Washington, DC,
the Boston Foundation and the Center for Language
Minority Education and Research, 1998
ISBN: 1-878554-17-4
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This book is an interdisciplinary
guide for teachers, administrators, students
and parents on ways to:
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analyze the roots of racism
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investigate the impact of racism on our lives
and on those of our families and our communities:
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examine the relationship between racism and other
forms of oppression such as sexism, classism
and heterosexism;
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learn how we can work to dismantle racism in
our school, communities and society at large
In Beyond Heroes and Holidays the authors share
lessons and readings that provide examples of
how educators, staff, students and parents can
work together to transform the curriculum, rather
than simply adding to current frameworks. We
also go beyond the classroom to address such
issues as tracking, parent/school relations and
language policies. There are many readings and
lessons for pre- and in-service staff development. |
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