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| Formato: | Recurso educativo Open Access |
| Lenguaje: | en |
| Publicado: |
1997
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| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED406481 |
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| _version_ | 1867181884137537536 |
|---|---|
| author | Yeo, Frederick L. |
| author_facet | Yeo, Frederick L. Yeo, Frederick L. |
| collection | Education Resources Information Center |
| contents | Inner-City Schools, Multiculturalism, and Teacher Education. A Professional Journey. Critical Education Practice, Volume 8. Garland Reference Library of Social Science, Volume 916. Yeo, Frederick L. Black Students Cultural Awareness Culture Educational Change Higher Education Inner City Institutional Characteristics Intermediate Grades Junior High Schools Middle Schools Minority Groups Multicultural Education Teacher Education Teaching Methods Urban Education Urban Schools This book addresses experientially and theoretically the nature of contemporary urban education, in terms of teaching and in the contexts of U.S. culture and teacher education. Much of it is derived from classroom experience as an inner-city classroom teacher. Chapter 1, "Connecting Inner Cities and Urban Schools: Racism's 'Slippery Slope,'" introduces the inner-city school as an institution and explores the aggregation of minorities in cities. Chapter 2, "When and Where They Enter: Going to School in Urban America," discusses the conditions and forces that distinguish the urban school and introduces approaches to curricula and pedagogical styles suitable for the urban school. Chapter 3, "Teaching in an Urban School: A Personal Narrative," explores one teacher's experiences in a predominantly African American middle school in Los Angeles (California) and shows the assumptions and practices discussed earlier in a real setting. In chapter 4, "Multicultural Education: Maintaining the Borders in Inner-City Schools," current reforms in education are analyzed as they apply to urban schools. Chapter 5, "A Vested Interest in Failure: Teacher Preparation and Inner-City Schools," moves to a discussion of formal teacher education and its attention to the minority student. Chapter 6, "The Search for New Connections," then presents an examination of the links that should exist between teacher education, multicultural education, and urban schools. (Contains 200 references.) (SLD) |
| format | Recurso educativo Open Access |
| id | eric_ED406481 |
| institution | ERIC Institute of Education Sciences |
| language | en |
| publishDate | 1997 |
| record_format | eric |
| spellingShingle | Inner-City Schools, Multiculturalism, and Teacher Education. A Professional Journey. Critical Education Practice, Volume 8. Garland Reference Library of Social Science, Volume 916. Yeo, Frederick L. Black Students Cultural Awareness Culture Educational Change Higher Education Inner City Institutional Characteristics Intermediate Grades Junior High Schools Middle Schools Minority Groups Multicultural Education Teacher Education Teaching Methods Urban Education Urban Schools Inner-City Schools, Multiculturalism, and Teacher Education. A Professional Journey. Critical Education Practice, Volume 8. Garland Reference Library of Social Science, Volume 916. Yeo, Frederick L. Black Students Cultural Awareness Culture Educational Change Higher Education Inner City Institutional Characteristics Intermediate Grades Junior High Schools Middle Schools Minority Groups Multicultural Education Teacher Education Teaching Methods Urban Education Urban Schools This book addresses experientially and theoretically the nature of contemporary urban education, in terms of teaching and in the contexts of U.S. culture and teacher education. Much of it is derived from classroom experience as an inner-city classroom teacher. Chapter 1, "Connecting Inner Cities and Urban Schools: Racism's 'Slippery Slope,'" introduces the inner-city school as an institution and explores the aggregation of minorities in cities. Chapter 2, "When and Where They Enter: Going to School in Urban America," discusses the conditions and forces that distinguish the urban school and introduces approaches to curricula and pedagogical styles suitable for the urban school. Chapter 3, "Teaching in an Urban School: A Personal Narrative," explores one teacher's experiences in a predominantly African American middle school in Los Angeles (California) and shows the assumptions and practices discussed earlier in a real setting. In chapter 4, "Multicultural Education: Maintaining the Borders in Inner-City Schools," current reforms in education are analyzed as they apply to urban schools. Chapter 5, "A Vested Interest in Failure: Teacher Preparation and Inner-City Schools," moves to a discussion of formal teacher education and its attention to the minority student. Chapter 6, "The Search for New Connections," then presents an examination of the links that should exist between teacher education, multicultural education, and urban schools. (Contains 200 references.) (SLD) |
| title | Inner-City Schools, Multiculturalism, and Teacher Education. A Professional Journey. Critical Education Practice, Volume 8. Garland Reference Library of Social Science, Volume 916. |
| topic | Black Students Cultural Awareness Culture Educational Change Higher Education Inner City Institutional Characteristics Intermediate Grades Junior High Schools Middle Schools Minority Groups Multicultural Education Teacher Education Teaching Methods Urban Education Urban Schools |
| url | https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED406481 |