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How do multicultural children and their parents experience the very
beginning of their school careers? How do teachers mediate the
demands of the educational system, and how do the children adapt?
What kind of access to the National Curriculum is offered to
multicultural children? Originally published in 1999, the authors
answer these questions by drawing on two years' intensive research
in three multi-ethnic institutions. They explore teachers' values
and beliefs and how they attempt to put them into practice. They
describe how, at times, teachers were constrained to get things
done because of pressures operating on them, but at other times,
taught creatively in a way particularly relevant to the children's
concerns and cultures. The authors studied the children's
experiences on their transition into school, and argue that they
were inducted into not only a general pupil role, but also one
based on an anglicised model of pupil. Opportunities for learning
which children found most meaningful came notably from free play,
but these became gradually more limited as they engaged with the
National Curriculum. These young children were forming complex
identities as they sought to respond to the varying influences
operating them. Their parents saw a cultural divide opening up
between home and school. Many suggestions for practice and policy
are made in the course of the book and are still relevant today.
How do multicultural children and their parents experience the very
beginning of their school careers? How do teachers mediate the
demands of the educational system, and how do the children adapt?
What kind of access to the National Curriculum is offered to
multicultural children? Originally published in 1999, the authors
answer these questions by drawing on two years' intensive research
in three multi-ethnic institutions. They explore teachers' values
and beliefs and how they attempt to put them into practice. They
describe how, at times, teachers were constrained to get things
done because of pressures operating on them, but at other times,
taught creatively in a way particularly relevant to the children's
concerns and cultures. The authors studied the children's
experiences on their transition into school, and argue that they
were inducted into not only a general pupil role, but also one
based on an anglicised model of pupil. Opportunities for learning
which children found most meaningful came notably from free play,
but these became gradually more limited as they engaged with the
National Curriculum. These young children were forming complex
identities as they sought to respond to the varying influences
operating them. Their parents saw a cultural divide opening up
between home and school. Many suggestions for practice and policy
are made in the course of the book and are still relevant today.
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