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Section archive - Multiculturalism & Diversity

Page 19/22 212 items
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181
The Contribution of Action-research to Training Teachers in Intercultural Education: A Research in the Field of Greek Minority Education
Authors: Magos Kostas
The aim of this research whether action-research can help educators help minority pupils. The research showed that the teachers’ training brought changes in their perceptions and attitudes related to their general ideological beliefs concerning otherness, their professional role and their educational work.
Published: 2007
Updated: Jul. 13, 2008
182
Preservice Teachers’ Culturally Responsive Teaching Self-efficacy and |Outcome Expectancy Beliefs
Authors: Siwatu Kaman Oginga
Two culturally responsive scales, Culturally Responsive Teaching Self-Efficacy Scale (CRTSE), and the Culturally Responsive Teaching Outcome Expectancy (CRTOE) Scale, written by author—were developed and administered to a sample of preservice teachers in the Midwest. Findings suggest preservice teachers are more efficacious in their ability to help students feel like important members of the classroom and develop positive, personal relationships with their students, than they are in their ability to communicate with English Language Learners. The preservice teachers were the lowest in letting their student maintain their native tongue to keep their cultural identity.
Published: 2007
Updated: Jun. 19, 2008
183
Pupils’ Attitudes Towards Foreign-language Learning and the Development of Literacy Skills in Bilingual Education
Authors: Merisuo-Storm Tuula
This study investigated effects on bilingual children on literacy skills and their attitude towards learning. Findings found that the bilingual classes, where 20% of the instruction was given in English, and students literacy skills were better than monolingual classes. When pupils started entering classes with good literacy skills, there were no significant differences between the two groups.
Published: 2007
Updated: Jun. 19, 2008
184
Participatory Action Research: Collective Reflections on Gender, Culture, and Language
Authors: McIntyre Alice, Chatzopoulos Nikolaos, Politi Anastasia, Roz Julieta
The study, a Participatory Action Research (PAR,) explored how preadolescent Latina girls in a Boston public school constructed their girlhood and other gender issues. But more focused, were the reflections of the team who conducted the study. All foreign born teaching students assisted by the research to understand the many issues in public education in the USA today.
Published: 2007
Updated: Jun. 18, 2008
185
Addressing diversity in US Teacher Preparation Programs: A Survey of Elementary and Secondary Programs’ Priorities and Challenges from Across the United States of America
Authors: Jennings Todd
A survey on diversity was gathered on 142 public university elementary and secondary teacher preparation programs, indicating that race or ethnicity was the most emphasized diversity. This element was followed by special needs, language diversity, economic (social class), gender and sexual orientation. Only California placed greater emphasis on language diversity but less on special needs. The data suggested that faculty knowledge about diversity and student attitudes.
Published: 2007
Updated: May. 12, 2008
186
Coping with high-achieving transnationalist immigrant students: The experience of Israeli teachers
Authors: Eisikovits Rivka A.
The study examines teachers' attitudes towards high achieving immigrant students. The study follows one teacher's work with highly motivated and academically successful immigrant children from the former Soviet Union. The study explores the teacher's experiences, communication communication patterns between the teachers and the students, and educational treatment of academic excellence.
Published: 2008
Updated: Mar. 31, 2008
187
Race, Ethnicity and Difference versus Imagined Homogeneity within the European Union
Authors: Gaine Chris
This article argues three things. First, it argues that the perception of diversity being problematic in Europe has been generated largely by non-European immigration into urban areas. This has been Britain’s experience for 50 years and Spain’s for barely ,15 but whether the immigrants are ex-colonial, Turkish or Balkan migrant labour, or Africans escaping economic despair, they are likely to be seen as troublingly ‘other’.
Published: 2008
Updated: Mar. 23, 2008
188
The Impossibility of Minority Ethnic Educational ‘Success’? An Examination of the Discourses of Teachers and Pupils in British Secondary Schools
Authors: Archer Louise
This article argues that in Britain dominant educational discourses of ‘the ideal pupil’ exclude minority ethnic pupils and prevent them from inhabiting a position of authentic ‘success’. It suggests that ‘the successful pupil’ is a desired yet refused subject position for many minority ethnic young people – even for those who are (to some extent) performing educational success.
Published: 2008
Updated: Mar. 23, 2008
189
Taking Identity Seriously: dilemmas for education policy and practice
Authors: Cribb Alan, Gewirtz Sharon
If we are to fully understand and adequately respond to the multicultural question in European education, it is necessary to develop rich empirical descriptions and theoretically rigorous explanations of policy processes and effects. For example, we need to be able to characterise and explain the differentiated ways in which education policies and practices do or do not recognise, support or undermine diverse cultural identities and do or do not reproduce various kinds of educational and social inequality.
Published: 2008
Updated: Mar. 23, 2008
190
From Foreigner Pedagogy to Intercultural Education: an analysis of the German responses to diversity and its impact on schools and students
Authors: Faas Daniel
This article first provides a socio-historical analysis of the German responses to migration-related cultural and religious diversity by tracing the development of educational policies from assimilationist notions of ‘foreigner pedagogy’ in the 1960s and 1970s to intercultural education, which slowly emerged in schools in the 1980s and 1990s.
Published: 2008
Updated: Mar. 23, 2008
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