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Let Freedom Ring For Everyone: The Diversity of Our Nation provides
students with selected readings that encourage a more fruitful,
informative, and open dialogue about race, ethnicity, and
immigration in the United States. The text explores the vast impact
of immigrants to the economic, political, and social systems of the
nation, as well as modern attitudes and perceptions toward ethnic
and immigrant populations. The book features four distinct parts.
Part I introduces the concepts of race, institutional racism,
whiteness, and race and ethnic equality, then presents articles
that examine these concepts from various perspectives. In Part II,
students learn about tools of dominance and division, including
stereotypes, the criminal justice system, the health care system,
the political system, and educational structures. Parts III and IV
contain readings regarding various minority groups that have
immigrated to the United States. Students learn and read about Arab
Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans, Brazilian Americans,
Haitian Americans, Jewish Americans, Native Americans, and Nigerian
Americans. Let Freedom Ring For Everyone is an enlightening and
illuminating text that is well suited for courses in American
history, American culture, black studies, and ethnic studies.
For hundreds of years, the American public education system has
neglected to fully examine, discuss, and acknowledge the vast and
rich history of people of African descent who have played a pivotal
role in the transformation of the United States. The establishment
of Black studies departments and programs represented a major
victory for higher education and a vindication of Black scholars
such as W. E. B. Du Bois and Nathan Huggins. This emerging field of
study sought to address omissions from numerous disciplines and
correct the myriad distortions, stereotypes, and myths about
persons of African descent. In An Introduction to Black Studies,
Eric R. Jackson demonstrates the continuing need for Black studies,
also known as African American studies, in university curricula.
Jackson connects the growth and impact of Black studies to the
broader context of social justice movements, emphasizing the
historical and contemporary demand for the discipline. This book
features seventeen chapters that focus on the primary eight
disciplines of Black studies: history, sociology, psychology,
religion, feminism, education, political science, and the arts.
Each chapter includes a biographical vignette of an important
figure in African American history, such as Frederick Douglass,
Louis Armstrong, and Madam C. J. Walker, as well as student
learning objectives that provide a starting point for educators.
This valuable work speaks to the strength and rigor of scholarship
on Blacks and African Americans, its importance to the formal
educational process, and its relevance to the United States and the
world.
This study explores the various ways in which parental involvement
can help to increase student academic success. More specifically,
this analysis is based on the notions that: 1) parent involvement
in inner city schools present unique challenges that are different
from the traditional middle class perspective; 2) there is value in
a cooperative approach between parents, teachers, and
administrators that places the student at the center of each major
discussion and decision; and 3) illustrates that parental
involvement is a real perspective and not just rhetorical jargon.
Although the focus of this book is in increasing parent involvement
in inner city schools, readers must be mindful that the ultimate
objective for this work and others like it is the successful
educating of all children, so that they graduate from high school,
and move into higher education, or into the workforce. Parent
involvement by itself will not ensure academic success of children,
but, combined with many strategies, including a clear understanding
of the differences between an inner city school environment and a
middle class school setting, effective teaching, sound and relevant
curricula, safe and secure learning environment, and visionary
leadership, children attending inner city schools can be just as
effective as those in middle class school settings.
This study explores the various ways in which parental involvement
can help to increase student academic success. More specifically,
this analysis is based on the notions that: 1) parent involvement
in inner city schools present unique challenges that are different
from the traditional middle class perspective; 2) there is value in
a cooperative approach between parents, teachers, and
administrators that places the student at the center of each major
discussion and decision; and 3) illustrates that parental
involvement is a real perspective and not just rhetorical jargon.
Although the focus of this book is in increasing parent involvement
in inner city schools, readers must be mindful that the ultimate
objective for this work and others like it is the successful
educating of all children, so that they graduate from high school,
and move into higher education, or into the workforce. Parent
involvement by itself will not ensure academic success of children,
but, combined with many strategies, including a clear understanding
of the differences between an inner city school environment and a
middle class school setting, effective teaching, sound and relevant
curricula, safe and secure learning environment, and visionary
leadership, children attending inner city schools can be just as
effective as those in middle class school settings.
Public education plays a crucial role in crafting a nation's
future. In the United States, education reform policy, particularly
the reliance on large-scale, standardized testing, is a growing
topic of national conversation and concern. An Illusion of Equity:
The Legacy of Eugenics in Today's Education demonstrates how
centuries of propaganda have led us to accept the idea that test
scores indicate something so valuable about human beings that they
should be used to organize society. Drawing on decades of
experience as an educator, author Wendy Zagray Warren unpacks the
origins of this practice, inviting us to probe the ideologies
underlying testing procedures and score interpretation and to
evaluate the rationale for using test scores as the sole markers
for academic achievement. From the beginning, large-scale tests
have produced scores divided by race and class. Initially, these
results aligned with the eugenic ideology of its creators. Warren
shows that while the rhetoric used to justify test-based policy has
changed, the model used to produce test scores remains much the
same. Therefore, so do the outcomes of test-based policies, which
continue to reproduce and reinforce the existing social hierarchy
of the United States. The hope of equity lies in educators charting
new paths and scholars around the world who are dreaming new
educational paradigms into being. Ultimately, Warren invites
policymakers, educators, and parents to explore the richness of
possibility when education is designed around the belief that every
child is worthy of the opportunity to thrive.
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