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El. knyga: Voices for Diversity and Social Justice: A Literary Education Anthology

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2015
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781475807141
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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2015
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781475807141
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Voices for Diversity and Social Justice: A Literary Education Anthology is an unflinching exploration through poetry, prose, and art of the heart of our educational systemof the segregation, bias, and oppression that are part of the daily lives of so many students and educators. It is also a series of poetical insights into the fights for liberation and resistance at the heart of many of the same students and teachers lives. The contributorsyouth, educators, activists, othersshare what it is like to face discrimination, challenge unjust policy, or subvert monotony by cultivating a vibrant, equitable, revolutionary school environment. This is not a prescriptive text, but instead a call to action. It is a call from many literary voices to create schools where social justice is at the core of education. Stunning in its revelations, Voices for Diversity and Social Justice is an anthology by educators and students unafraid to be passionate about what is missing, what is needed, and what is working in order to make that vision a reality. 

Recenzijos

Diversity is not merely difference but differences that arise out of commonality, such as the humanity we all share. Justice implies equality in treatment, privilege, opportunity, or other arenas. Social justice has a connotation of what society ought to do or what society is doing to ensure just treatment of its members. Of course, these concepts require greater precision when used and are prone to misunderstanding and manipulation in contemporary usage. This work aims to clarify terminology used in popular vernacular and expose some of the nuances that we typically don't consider but profoundly impact our thinking, speech, and actions. Entries are alphabetically arranged, and each has a reference for those interested in additional research. Most entries provide an ind-depth treatment of their subject matters and are written so as to be accessible to the general reader. Examples include Able-ism, Bisexuality, Empathy, Freedom of speech, and Tokenism. Some main-level headings have two entries exploring either specialized aspects of that topic or presenting a different viewpoint on the issue. The clarity and depth of the entries make the set suitable for general readers as well as specialists looking to broaden their knowledge. . . .Recommended for the most academic libraries. * Publishers Weekly * This book fills a very important void in the field of education. The editors have done a masterful job connecting poems, essays, memoirs, short stories and visual art to promote diversity and social justice in education. I highly recommend this book for all who care about the power of education to change the world! -- Chance W. Lewis, PhD, Carol Grotnes Belk Distinguished Professor of Urban Education; director, The Urban Education Collaborative, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte This anthology honors the multitude of stories that are alive in our culture, and that need to be heard. Writers both well-known and unknown tell their truths in poetry and prose. They make beauty; they call out for understanding, or change.   I am reminded of my many years working as a poet in the schools, of the beauty and joy and learning that happen when everyone is encouraged to make art, when everyone's truth is respected, and listened to.I believe this book will will do good work in the world, and will awaken its readers to values we should and could hold dear in schools everywhere. -- Deborah Keenan Poet, professor, Creative Writing Programs, Hamline University Echoing from classrooms, schools and communities across this country comes voices of rationality and justice. The words on these pages by the authors speak volumes to everyone. I was moved to read this text and am so moved that I view many of these poems as required reading and reflection points for all who are concerned with social justice. -- Robert W. Simmons III, Eastern Michigan University, Teacher Education Anyone in or around the education field needs to read Voices for Diversity and Social Justice. This anthology captures the modern moments of students in grades K-12, and college, who do not identify with their schools norms of identity, experience, or behavior. In poignant prose and powerful poetry, a tale of educational events from the 1950s through today is woven seamlessly, told through multiple voices and various perspectives. And yet, the narrative is cohesive, suggesting that while many things have changed in the last 65 years, some things remain. The feeling that the young trailblazers felt as they entered white schools after the Brown vs Board decision resonates with todays students as expressed by the anonymous writer of I Get It, who says, You unlocked the door and let me in. I better behave. This is an anthology of voices that want to act up, of voices no longer silenced, no longer whispering, no longer raised in a meeting and then forgotten like echoes across limited time. This anthology is of voices that will continue to reverberate, in print so as not to be denied. -- Rodney Glasgow, chief Diversity Officer, St. Andrews Episcopal School of Potomac, MD; Founder and Chair, National Diversity Directors Institute; Chair, National Association of Independent Schools Student Diversity Leadership Conference

Foreword xiii
Introduction xvii
Part I Speaking Through the Silence
1 Diz on the Way to School
3(2)
Fred Arcoleo
2 I Get It
5(2)
Anon
3 Between Worlds
7(2)
Heidi Andrea Restrepo Rhodes
4 How I Came to Poetry
9(2)
Jeanne Bryner
5 This School
11(2)
Jan Buley
6 English as a Second Language at Our Lady of Guadeloupe Church
13(6)
Jeff Lacey
Section Questions: Speaking Through the Silence
15(4)
Part II Experiencing Poverty
7 Telling It Like It Is
19(2)
Adaline Carlette Love
Leslie Ball
8 Family Matters: A Mother and Daughter's Literacy Journey
21(6)
Amy D. Clark
9 The Worst Thing About Being Poor
27(2)
Amy E. Harter
10 The Poster Board
29(2)
Carol L. Revelle
11 Dress to Impress
31(2)
Salvador "Chato" Hernandez
12 [ Untitled]
33(6)
Tricia Gallagher-Geurtsen
Section Questions: Experiencing Poverty
35(4)
Part III Unleashing Youth's Voices
13 What If Cornel West Was Wrong?
39(2)
Becky Martinez
14 Ramon's Truth
41(4)
Fred Arcoleo
15 Girl on Fire
45(2)
Cathleen Cohen
16 Appalachian by Proxy
47(4)
Althea Webb
17 Language, The Truest Tongue
51(2)
Barbara Tramonte
18 Talking blocks
53(2)
Cindy L. Prater
19 Skin
55(6)
Tessa Stark
Section Questions: Unleashing Student Voices
57(4)
Part IV Being the Target
20 Survival
61(2)
Lorena German
21 Star Student
63(6)
Emily Brooks
22 Equations
69(2)
Cathleen Cohen
23 Looking in the mirror in elementary school
71(2)
Sidrah Maysoon
24 The Tower, the Book, and the Girl They Let In: A Fable on Blackness and Racial Equity in the Academy
73(10)
Shannon Gibney
25 To Lumpia or to Not Lumpia?: A Counterstory of a Multicultural Racial Microaggression
83(4)
Cheryl E. Matias
26 The New Girl
87(6)
Sheila O'Connor
Section Questions: Being the Target
89(4)
Part V Claiming Our Space and Identities
27 White Hallways
93(2)
Cora-Lee Conway
28 First Generation College Blues
95(6)
Rosanna M. Salcedo
29 Learning Up Front
101(2)
Curtis Robbins
30 The Way I Am
103(2)
Min Feldman
31 Independence Day
105(4)
Elizabeth L. Sammons
32 America
109(6)
Lauren Gatti
33 A Cultural Frankenstein
115(2)
Pao "Aegean" Yang
34 Spirit First, Consequences Second: The Politics of Gender and Culture in the Playground
117(6)
Xamuel Banales
35 Forced Out at School: The Tenth Grade
123(2)
Erica Lenti
36 Torn
125(8)
Jia Curry-Bild
Section Questions: Claiming Our Space and Identities
129(4)
Part VI Celebrating the Power of Teachers
37 Testimony
133(2)
Tasha Gaff
38 Seat Them with Princes
135(4)
Jeanne Bryner
39 Finding the Strength in the Fragile
139(6)
Kristy Pierce
40 Piling On: One Teacher's Journey Toward Social Justice
145(14)
Lisa Cech
Section Questions: Celebrating the Power of Teachers
155(4)
Part VII Reaching Across Difference and Celebrating Diversity's Richness
41 People-Colored Crayons
159(2)
Julie Feng
42 "Red Light, Green Light"
161(2)
DJ Savarese
43 Walking Down the Corridor Is Being in Another Country
163(2)
Julie Landsman
44 A Visit to the County Special Ed Program
165(2)
Mary Langer Thompson
45 Breaking the Ice
167(2)
Lisa Richter
46 Chasing Butterflies and Catching Grasshoppers
169(12)
Elizabeth E. Vaughn
47 Breaking Bread
181(8)
Merna Ann Hecht
Section Questions: Reaching Across Difference and Celebrating Diversity's Richness
185(4)
Part VIII Subversive Teaching and Learning
48 How I Learned to Read the Word
189(4)
Francisco Rios
49 Even Kings
193
Richard Holinger
Section Questions: Subversive Teaching and Learning
201
Julie Landsman is a retired teacher, author of A White Teacher Talks About Race and Growing Up White; A Veteran Teacher Reflects on Racism. She consults with schools and universities around the country and internationally.

Paul C. Gorski is the founder of EdChange and teaches in the Social Justice and Human Rights program in George Mason Universitys New Century College. He is a social justice activist, educator, and writer with social justice as his core.

Rosanna M. Salcedo is a Latina artist, educator, parent, activist, and dreamer. She teaches Spanish and currently holds the position of Dean of Multicultural Affairs at Phillips Exeter Academy, a preparatory school in New England, where she resides with her two sons and their dog.