Teaching and supporting migrant children in our schools : a culturally proficient approach

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Teaching and supporting migrant children in our schools : a culturally proficient approach

Reyes L. Quezada, Fernando Rodríguez-Valls, and Randall B. Lindsey

Rowman & Littlefield, c2016

  • : pbk
  • : cloth

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-170) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

General approaches to multiculturalism run the risk of overlooking an increasingly diverse student population that deserves special consideration and attention: students from immigrant backgrounds whose families toil the fields in order to provide better educational opportunities for their children. This book's purpose is to guide educators to think deeply about their roles and responsibilities in the education of children of farmworker families in our nation's schools. Readers will view their classrooms, schools, districts, and the migrant programs they lead in a broad and inclusive manner through the lens of cultural proficiency. The initial steps when embracing cultural proficiency entails thinking reflectively about one's own values and behaviors and the school's policies and practices toward children of farmworker families. Cultivating a willingness, openness and commitment to meeting the challenges and opportunities of this often-invisible aspect of diversity is an important first step for the development of effective educational practices for migrant students and their families. The cultural proficiency framework can inform staff development models for working effectively with migrant students and their families.

Table of Contents

Foreword: Roger Rossenthal Acknowledgments PART I: Tools to Support Use of this book Chapter 1: The Context in Educating Children of Migrant Farmworkers Chapter 2: The Tools of Cultural Proficiency for Educator Use Chapter 3: Learning Communities + Culturally Proficient Leadership = Students from Migrant Families Being Well Served Chapter 4: Educators' Rubric for Inclusion and Support of Migrant Education Students, Families and Communities - Moving Beyond Rhetoric PART II: Essential Elements Chapter 5: Assessing Cultural Knowledge-From Self-Centered Learning to Socially Just Student- and Community-Asset LearningChapter 6: Valuing Diversity is Reflected in the Beliefs and Values You and Your School's Hold and How You Share those Beliefs and Values with Your Community Chapter 7: Managing the Dynamics of Difference to Make a Difference Chapter 8: Adapting to the Diversity as a Team in the Schools and Communities We Serve Chapter 9: Institutionalizing Cultural Knowledge-for You, Your School, and the Migrant Communities You Serve PART III: Next Steps Chapter 10: Professional Communities Learning Together to Improve Migrant Student's Academic and Social Outcomes Appendix: Resources in Support of Migrant Education References About the Authors Index

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