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A Comparative Study of the Educational Policy for Native Americans (1887-1928) and Chinese Ethnic Minorities (1912-1948)

A Comparative Study of the Educational Policy for Native Americans (1887-1928) and Chinese Ethnic Minorities (1912-1948)
Author: Xinyuan Mao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 103
Release: 2011
Genre: Indians of North America
ISBN: 9781124618999

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Native Americans and Chinese ethnic minorities have long history and unique cultures. I studied educational history of Chinese ethnic minorities in China. It is commonly accepted in China today that the overall treatment and educational level of Native Americans in the US is better than that of ethnic minority groups in China. This assumption is undoubtedly due to the ongoing problems associated with the state national minority policies and attempts to find better solutions outside of that national space. My thesis, originating in the contrasts I found between that assumption and the realities of Native American education once I arrived in United States, is that the early history of minority education in both nations is relatively equal. I argued that both governments aimed to assimilate minority groups through education. This research project compares the history of Native American education policy in the early US state (1887-1928) to policies of education for officially recognized minority groups in the new-formed Republic of China (1912-1948). It focuses on these time periods because in both cases these were eras in which the relatively early state was first trying to find ways to bring minority groups into the national project. Also, the boarding school for Native Americans and the elementary school for the Chinese Muslims both played important roles in the process. This study chooses these two types of schools as case studies to compare.


Official Encouragement, Institutional Discouragement

Official Encouragement, Institutional Discouragement
Author: William G. Tierney
Publisher: Praeger
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1992
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0893918296

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American Indian students are among the most underrepresented groups in academe, and few of those who enter college finish. This book attempts to provide greater understanding of Native American experiences in higher education through analysis based on critical theory, focusing particularly on the recruitment and retention of Native Americans by postsecondary institutions. At least two stories are told about the challenges and obstacles that Native Americans face in college. The first story, told by traditional research, considers minority retention in higher education as a "problem" that has existed throughout academe's history. Traditional research, such as that of V. Tinto, focuses on student characteristics, the fit between student and institution, and the extent of student integration into the institution's academic and social life. In contrast, this book uses comparative case studies to provide multiple perspectives and to analyze the patterns of American Indian students' experience within the conceptual framework of critical ethnography. Over 200 interviews of students and staff were conducted at 10 postsecondary institutions (including 4 tribal colleges) with sizable Indian enrollments. The voices of Indian students speak of how the world of higher education appears to them, reflecting influences of family, culture, gender, and class on student experience. The final section analyzes the "culture of power" that exists in academe, discusses rituals of student empowerment, and offers suggestions for constructing alternative forms of authority and a culturally responsive pedagogy that empowers rather than disables. Appendix comments on methodology and praxis. Contains 157 references and author and subject indexes. (SV)


Status and Trends in the Education of Racial and Ethnic Minorities

Status and Trends in the Education of Racial and Ethnic Minorities
Author: Angelina KewalRamani
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2007
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781422399934

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Examines the educational progress & challenges that racial & ethnic minorities face in the U.S. This report shows that over time larger numbers of minorities have completed high school & continued their education in college. Despite these gains, progress has varied, & differences persist among Hispanic, Black, American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, & white students on key indicators of educational performance. Extensive charts & tables.


The Color of Teaching

The Color of Teaching
Author: June Gordon
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2002-11-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135699100

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One of the major concerns in education at present is how to recruit and attract more teachers from ethnic minorities. In an attempt to move beyond the superficial and simplistic responses as to why these students are not entering teaching this book presents in-depth interviews with over two hundred people from four ethnic groups: African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans and Latinos. These interviewees, many of them teachers or education professionals, express their attitude towards teaching and their understanding of why others may not choose teaching as a career. One of the most significant and surprising findings is that, regardless of academic or socio-economic standing, students from these ethnic groups tend not to be encouraged to enter the teaching profession by their own families communities and peers. The book concludes with a discussion of programmatic changes and calls for the reconceptualization of the role of teachers. Such changes can only arise out of a fundamental change in attitude of communities of color towards teaching which must be led by teachers themselves.