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This compilation of research and stories from the field about
multilingual family-school partnerships explores where systemic
inequities exist at the school, district, or community level, and
consider strategies that disrupt normative ways in which
multilingual families are included in educational decisions. The
authors present family-school partnerships in educational and
non-educational settings across the United States, and identify
frameworks, models, and practices for engaging multilingual
families in schooling. This edited volume is organized into four
sections. Section one, “School District Collaborations with
Multilingual Families,” describes how districts honor the
knowledge of multilingual parents as foundational tenets in their
collaborative work with them. Section two, “School Leadership
Approaches to Engaging Multilingual Families,” focuses on how
school leaders enacted critical approaches to building
relationships with multilingual families. Section three,
“Educator Partnerships with Multilingual Families,” explores
educators’ approaches to developing relationships with
multilingual families. Section four, “Multilingual Families as
Leaders in School Partnerships,” highlights the visible and
invisible ways that multilingual parents contribute to the overall
success of their children. Each chapter offers examples of
successes and challenges of partnerships with multilingual families
and how they can help to transform school communities.
Medical Sociology is the among the largest and first subdisciplines
in Sociology. It is an area of ongoing work, advancing theory,
method and our substantive understanding of social life. This
series brings together the newest issues and most current concerns
in Medical Sociology, in an ongoing collection of edited volumes.
Each volume is edited by a medical sociologist with a particular
expertise, bringing together contributions from sociologists
working in different settings and nations, exploring one particular
advance in Medical Sociology.
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