Student cultural diversity: understanding and meeting the challenge
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston u.a.
Houghton Mifflin
2002
|
Ausgabe: | 3rd ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references (p. 419-445) and index |
Beschreibung: | xvii, 455 p. ill. : 23 cm |
ISBN: | 0618122087 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a García, Eugene E. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Student cultural diversity |b understanding and meeting the challenge |c Eugene García |
250 | |a 3rd ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Boston u.a. |b Houghton Mifflin |c 2002 | |
300 | |a xvii, 455 p. |b ill. : 23 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references (p. 419-445) and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a Erziehung | |
650 | 4 | |a Minderheit | |
650 | 4 | |a Children of minorities |x Education |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Minorities |x Education |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Multicultural education |z United States | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Interkulturelle Erziehung |0 (DE-588)4123440-6 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
651 | 4 | |a USA | |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015966613 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137009930829824 |
---|---|
adam_text | Brief Contents
List of Tables
xi
List of Figures
xii
Preface
xiii
Part One Student Diversity in Context
1
Chapter
1
Cultural Diversity in America s Schools
2
Chapter
2
Views of Culture and Education
67
Chapter
3
Educational Approaches to Student Cultural Diversity
98
Part Two The Roots of Diversity
129
Chapter
4
An Ecology of Family, Home, and School
130
Chapter
5
Language and Communication
175
Chapter
6
Language, Culture, and Cognition
241
Part Three The Educational Response
283
Chapter
7
The Effective Teacher: Preparation, Assessment,
and Characteristics
284
Chapter
8
Effective Instruction of Linguistically and Culturally
Diverse Children
322
Chapter
9
Educational Approaches at the Middle and Secondary
School Level
361
Glossary
415
References
419
Index
447
Contents
List of
Tables
xi
List of Figures
xii
Preface
xiii
Part One Student Diversity in Context
1
Chapter
1
Cultural Diversity in America s Schools
2
An Introduction
3
A Portrait of Change and Challenge
4
The Extent of Cultural Diversity Among U.S. Students Today
7
Expecting a Different World
7
Immigration: The Historical Basis of Diversity
7
The New Immigration Phenomenon
12
Immigrant Students in U.S. Schools
14
Understanding the Immigrant Student Population
1
б
The Challenge Will Continue
19
Measuring Racial and Ethnic Diversity
20
Projected Trends for U.S. Schools
21
Indicators of Child and Family Well-Being
23
Student Diversity and Educational Vulnerability
25
Dropout Rate
26
Academic Achievement
27
Educational Funding Policies
29
A Wasted Resource
33
The Implications for Educators
34
Effective Teaching
34
ES
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Educational Backgrounds of Today s
Immigrant Students
36
Problems in Training and Assessment
37
The Language Minority Student
39
Who Are These Students?
40
What Types of Educational Programs Serve These Students?
41
Federal and State Educational Policies
43
Federal Legislative Initiatives
43
The New National Educational Policies of
1994
and
2000 44
Knowledge Base
45
Wisdom of Practice
46
Cohesiveness
47
Demographic and Budgetary Realities
47
Changing Title
VII
to Ensure Effective Schooling for Language
Minority Students
48
Federal Legal Initiatives
49
1
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: California: The Minority
Majority State
50
State Initiatives
53
The Five Rs of Educational Reform
54
Respectful
55
Responsive
56
Responsible
57
Resourceful
58
Reasonable
59
Conclusion
60
Summary of Major Ideas
62
Extending Your Experience
64
Resources for Further Study
64
Chapter
2
Views of Culture and Education
67
New Contexts for Education
68
The Role of Schools
70
Cultural Change and Disruption
71
What Is Culture?
73
The Group-Oriented Concept of Culture
74
Educational Considerations
75
The Individual-Oriented Concept of Culture
77
Educational Considerations
78
ИЈ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Influential Teachers,
Influential Students
80
Culture as Central to Development and Education
81
Race, Class, Gender, and Cultural Diversity
83
The Role of Cultural Capital
84
The Culture of the School
85
Student Response to School Culture
86
The School s Response to Children
87
Teaching in a Cultural Context
88
Personal Commitment
88
Knowledge of What Makes a Difference
90
Educational Leadership
91
Knowledge Dissemination
91
Professional Development
91
Disposition for Leadership
91
Affective Engagement
91
Conclusion
92
Summary of Major Ideas
92
Extending Your Experience
94
Resources for Further Study
95
Chapter
3
Educational Approaches to Student Cultural Diversity
98
A Historical Survey
99
Americanization
100
VI
Contents
Educational Equity
104
Multicultural Education
106
Disparate Coals of Multicultural Education
107
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Assimilation Doesn t Equal Success
108
An Appraisal of Progress
111
Beyond Multicultural Education
112
New Theoretical Perspectives
114
A Continuum of Theories
115
The
Constructivist
Perspective
11 7
A New Pedagogy
119
Responsive Learning Communities
120
Conclusion
121
Summary of Major Ideas
122
Extending Your Experience
125
Resources for Further Study
126
Part Two The Roots of Diversity
129
Chapter
4
An Ecology of Family, Home, and School
130
The Meeting of Cultures
131
The Role of the Family in the Socialization of Children
134
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: How Home Life Shapes
Classroom Behavior
136
The Concept of Ecology
139
Ecology of the Family
13 9
Social Ecology
140
Ethnic Image and Its Effects
141
Ethnic Images in Society
141
Effects of Ethnic Images on Children
144
A Cultural Systems Account of Underachievement
146
Educational Implications
154
Educational Implications of Family Diversity
1 55
Power and Privilege in Parent Involvement
157
Building Bridges Between Diverse Cultures
159
Tracking and Ability Grouping
165
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Community of Learners
166
Conclusion
169
Summary of Major Ideas
169
Extending Your Experience
172
Resources for Further Study
172
Chapter
5
Language and Communication
175
The Nature of Communication
176
The Development of Language
178
Phonology
178
Contents
VII
Vocabulary
179
Grammar
181
Pragmatics and Discourse Rules
181
Pragmatics for Conversation
182
Pragmatics for Literacy
183
Pragmatics for Different Discourse Situations
183
Bilingualism and Second-Language Acquisition
185
Patterns of Language Development and Cognitive Aspects
186
New Areas of Emerging Research in U.S. Bilingual Schooling
191
Authentic Assessment of Second-Language Learners
191
Negative Effects of Standard Assessment
193
Recommendations for Authentic Assessment
194
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Language and Literacy
Assessment Rubric
202
Two-Way Immersion Programs
203
Academic English and the Second-Language Learner
207
Relationship Between Academic and General English
211
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Real-Life Practices That Enhance
Literacy Development
214
Use of Dialects
218
Black English
219
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Learning by Talking
220
Special Language Minority Populations
225
Bilingual-Bicultural Education for Deaf Students
225
Ora
I ism
225
Total Communication
226
U.S. Indigenous Bilingual Students
230
Conclusion
234
Summary of Major Ideas
235
Extending Your Experience
237
Resources for Further Study
238
Chapter
6
Language, Culture, and Cognition
241
The Role of Culture in Cognition
243
Constructivism and Cognition
244
Language and Culture as Tools of Thought
246
A Foundation for Language Proficiency
247
An Assessment of Intelligence Testing
248
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: How Two Students Developed Through
Collaborative Learning
252
School Reform-Standards-Based Accountability Assessments
255
Inappropriate Assessment of Limited-English-Proficient Students
256
Social Promotion Provisions Will Also Result in Disadvantages
for Limited-English-Proficient Students
258
California s Accountability System Will Create Disadvantages for Limited-
English-Proficient Students and Their Schools
259
VIII
Contents
Two Aspects of Effective Teaching in Culturally Diverse Classrooms That Focus
on Language and Cognition
260
Instructional Discourse
261
Elements ofCood Classroom Discourse
263
Instructional Discourse for Diverse Students
265
Student Writing Development
269
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Tapestry of Interaction
270
Conclusion
274
Summary of Major Ideas
276
Extending Your Experience
278
Resources for Further Study
278
Part Three The Educational Response
283
Chapter
7
The Effective Teacher: Preparation, Assessment,
and Characteristics
284
The Current System of Professional Preparation and Assessment
286
Professional Credentialing of Teachers
287
Recommended Competencies for Teachers of Linguistically
Diverse Students
289
Role of Bilingual Teachers
290
Role of ESL Teachers
292
Changes in Teacher-Preparation Programs
293
Shift to Site-Based Training
293
Characteristics of Effective Teachers of Culturally and Linguistically
Diverse Students
297
Knowledge
298
Skills
299
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher. A Successful Practitioner in Math
Disposition
303
Affect
304
PH Becoming a Responsive Teacher. How Do I Implement Interactive
Parent/Family-Teacher Journals?
308
302
Effective Teaching and Learning
309
The Key Questions
310
The Principal s Role in Effective Schooling
Integrity
312
Responsibility
314
Affect
315
312
Conclusion
316
Summary of Major Ideas
317
Extending Your Experience
319
Resources for Further Study
320
Contents
Chapter
8
Effective Instruction of Linguistically and Culturally
Diverse Children
322
ATheoretical Framework: Two Divergent Views
324
Characteristics of Effective Schools
325
The National School Reform Perspective
331
Effective Instructional Practices
335
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher. An Effective Teacher s Reflections,
in Her Own Voice
336
The SBIF Study
340
The Garcia and Related Studies
342
High Levels of Communication
342
Integrated and Thematic Curriculum
343
Interactive Cross-Age Tutoring
343
Collaborative Learning
344
Language and Literacy
345
Crowing Practice Support for a Responsive Pedagogy
348
Watsonville, California
348
Chicago
349
Los Angeles
350
Milwaukee
3 51
Arlington, Virginia
351
San
Clemente,
California
351
Dearborn, Michigan
352
PH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Letter Home
352
Artesia, California
353
Conclusion
353
Summary of Major Ideas
355
Extending Your Experience
357
Resources for Further Study
357
Chapter
9
Educational Approaches at the Middle and Secondary
School Level
361
Then and Now: A Personal Rendition of What Works
362
The Genesis of Project Theme
365
Project Theme: Principles and Strategies
366
Specific Activities of Project Theme
369
Professional Development for Teachers
369
Assessment Practices
369
Enhancement of Students Academic Learning
370
Improvement of Students Self-Esteem
370
The Results of Project Theme
371
Academic Achievement in Language, Reading, and Writing
371
Ethnographic Data on Students Self-Concepts
372
Ethnic Identity
373
Positive Self-Esteem
373
Contents
Future
Aspirations
374
Academic Strategies and Perceptions About Schooling
377
Social Identity of Students and Parents
377
Math Achievement, Attitudes, and Self-Concepts
379
Long-Term
Effects of the Project
380
The Conclusion of Research on Project Theme
381
Rethinking, Rebuilding, and Engaging Change at the High School Level
383
Project
AVANCE
386
Reorganizing the Structure of the School
387
Outcomes of the
AVANCE
Intervention
388
Course Standards and Evaluation
389
Student-Cenerated Themes
390
Staff Networking
391
Effective Strategies and Practices
3 91
E3 Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Using Instructional Conversations
for Content-Area Learning
392
Specially Designed Academic Instruction in English (SDAIE)
394
Learning from Project
AVANCE
396
Programs That Work to Enhance College Participation
398
Student-Centered Programs
399
Early Outreach Partnerships by Colleges and Universities
399
MESA
399
School-Centered Programs
400
AVID:
U n
tracking Students
400
High School
Puente
402
Implications for Intervention Programs
406
Conclusion
408
Summary of Major Ideas
409
Extending Your Experience
410
Resources for Further Study
411
Glossary
415
References
419
Index
447
|
adam_txt |
Brief Contents
List of Tables
xi
List of Figures
xii
Preface
xiii
Part One Student Diversity in Context
1
Chapter
1
Cultural Diversity in America's Schools
2
Chapter
2
Views of Culture and Education
67
Chapter
3
Educational Approaches to Student Cultural Diversity
98
Part Two The Roots of Diversity
129
Chapter
4
An Ecology of Family, Home, and School
130
Chapter
5
Language and Communication
175
Chapter
6
Language, Culture, and Cognition
241
Part Three The Educational Response
283
Chapter
7
The Effective Teacher: Preparation, Assessment,
and Characteristics
284
Chapter
8
Effective Instruction of Linguistically and Culturally
Diverse Children
322
Chapter
9
Educational Approaches at the Middle and Secondary
School Level
361
Glossary
415
References
419
Index
447
Contents
List of
Tables
xi
List of Figures
xii
Preface
xiii
Part One Student Diversity in Context
1
Chapter
1
Cultural Diversity in America's Schools
2
An Introduction
3
A Portrait of Change and Challenge
4
The Extent of Cultural Diversity Among U.S. Students Today
7
Expecting a Different World
7
Immigration: The Historical Basis of Diversity
7
The New Immigration Phenomenon
12
Immigrant Students in U.S. Schools
14
Understanding the Immigrant Student Population
1
б
The Challenge Will Continue
19
Measuring Racial and Ethnic Diversity
20
Projected Trends for U.S. Schools
21
Indicators of Child and Family Well-Being
23
Student Diversity and Educational Vulnerability
25
Dropout Rate
26
Academic Achievement
27
Educational Funding Policies
29
A Wasted Resource
33
The Implications for Educators
34
Effective Teaching
34
ES
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Educational Backgrounds of Today's
Immigrant Students
36
Problems in Training and Assessment
37
The Language Minority Student
39
Who Are These Students?
40
What Types of Educational Programs Serve These Students?
41
Federal and State Educational Policies
43
Federal Legislative Initiatives
43
The New National Educational Policies of
1994
and
2000 44
Knowledge Base
45
Wisdom of Practice
46
Cohesiveness
47
Demographic and Budgetary Realities
47
Changing Title
VII
to Ensure Effective Schooling for Language
Minority Students
48
Federal Legal Initiatives
49
1
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: California: The "Minority
Majority" State
50
State Initiatives
53
The Five Rs of Educational Reform
54
Respectful
55
Responsive
56
Responsible
57
Resourceful
58
Reasonable
59
Conclusion
60
Summary of Major Ideas
62
Extending Your Experience
64
Resources for Further Study
64
Chapter
2
Views of Culture and Education
67
New Contexts for Education
68
The Role of Schools
70
Cultural Change and Disruption
71
What Is Culture?
73
The Group-Oriented Concept of Culture
74
Educational Considerations
75
The Individual-Oriented Concept of Culture
77
Educational Considerations
78
ИЈ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Influential Teachers,
Influential Students
80
Culture as Central to Development and Education
81
Race, Class, Gender, and Cultural Diversity
83
The Role of Cultural Capital
84
The Culture of the School
85
Student Response to School Culture
86
The School's Response to Children
87
Teaching in a Cultural Context
88
Personal Commitment
88
Knowledge of What Makes a Difference
90
Educational Leadership
91
Knowledge Dissemination
91
Professional Development
91
Disposition for Leadership
91
Affective Engagement
91
Conclusion
92
Summary of Major Ideas
92
Extending Your Experience
94
Resources for Further Study
95
Chapter
3
Educational Approaches to Student Cultural Diversity
98
A Historical Survey
99
Americanization
100
VI
Contents
Educational Equity
104
Multicultural Education
106
Disparate Coals of Multicultural Education
107
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Assimilation Doesn't Equal Success
108
An Appraisal of Progress
111
Beyond Multicultural Education
112
New Theoretical Perspectives
114
A Continuum of Theories
115
The
Constructivist
Perspective
11 7
A New Pedagogy
119
Responsive Learning Communities
120
Conclusion
121
Summary of Major Ideas
122
Extending Your Experience
125
Resources for Further Study
126
Part Two The Roots of Diversity
129
Chapter
4
An Ecology of Family, Home, and School
130
The Meeting of Cultures
131
The Role of the Family in the Socialization of Children
134
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: How Home Life Shapes
Classroom Behavior
136
The Concept of Ecology
139
Ecology of the Family
13 9
Social Ecology
140
Ethnic Image and Its Effects
141
Ethnic Images in Society
141
Effects of Ethnic Images on Children
144
A Cultural Systems Account of Underachievement
146
Educational Implications
154
Educational Implications of Family Diversity
1 55
Power and Privilege in Parent Involvement
157
Building Bridges Between Diverse Cultures
159
Tracking and Ability Grouping
165
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Community of Learners
166
Conclusion
169
Summary of Major Ideas
169
Extending Your Experience
172
Resources for Further Study
172
Chapter
5
Language and Communication
175
The Nature of Communication
176
The Development of Language
178
Phonology
178
Contents
VII
Vocabulary
179
Grammar
181
Pragmatics and Discourse Rules
181
Pragmatics for Conversation
182
Pragmatics for Literacy
183
Pragmatics for Different Discourse Situations
183
Bilingualism and Second-Language Acquisition
185
Patterns of Language Development and Cognitive Aspects
186
New Areas of Emerging Research in U.S. Bilingual Schooling
191
Authentic Assessment of Second-Language Learners
191
Negative Effects of Standard Assessment
193
Recommendations for Authentic Assessment
194
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Language and Literacy
Assessment Rubric
202
Two-Way Immersion Programs
203
Academic English and the Second-Language Learner
207
Relationship Between Academic and General English
211
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Real-Life Practices That Enhance
Literacy Development
214
Use of Dialects
218
Black English
219
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Learning by Talking
220
Special Language Minority Populations
225
Bilingual-Bicultural Education for Deaf Students
225
Ora
I ism
225
Total Communication
226
U.S. Indigenous Bilingual Students
230
Conclusion
234
Summary of Major Ideas
235
Extending Your Experience
237
Resources for Further Study
238
Chapter
6
Language, Culture, and Cognition
241
The Role of Culture in Cognition
243
Constructivism and Cognition
244
Language and Culture as Tools of Thought
246
A Foundation for Language Proficiency
247
An Assessment of Intelligence Testing
248
EH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: How Two Students Developed Through
Collaborative Learning
252
School Reform-Standards-Based Accountability Assessments
255
Inappropriate Assessment of Limited-English-Proficient Students
256
Social Promotion Provisions Will Also Result in Disadvantages
for Limited-English-Proficient Students
258
California's Accountability System Will Create Disadvantages for Limited-
English-Proficient Students and Their Schools
259
VIII
Contents
Two Aspects of Effective Teaching in Culturally Diverse Classrooms That Focus
on Language and Cognition
260
Instructional Discourse
261
Elements ofCood Classroom Discourse
263
Instructional Discourse for Diverse Students
265
Student Writing Development
269
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Tapestry of Interaction
270
Conclusion
274
Summary of Major Ideas
276
Extending Your Experience
278
Resources for Further Study
278
Part Three The Educational Response
283
Chapter
7
The Effective Teacher: Preparation, Assessment,
and Characteristics
284
The Current System of Professional Preparation and Assessment
286
Professional Credentialing of Teachers
287
Recommended Competencies for Teachers of Linguistically
Diverse Students
289
Role of Bilingual Teachers
290
Role of ESL Teachers
292
Changes in Teacher-Preparation Programs
293
Shift to Site-Based Training
293
Characteristics of Effective Teachers of Culturally and Linguistically
Diverse Students
297
Knowledge
298
Skills
299
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher. A Successful Practitioner in Math
Disposition
303
Affect
304
PH Becoming a Responsive Teacher. How Do I Implement Interactive
Parent/Family-Teacher Journals?
308
302
Effective Teaching and Learning
309
The Key Questions
310
The Principal's Role in Effective Schooling
Integrity
312
Responsibility
314
Affect
315
312
Conclusion
316
Summary of Major Ideas
317
Extending Your Experience
319
Resources for Further Study
320
Contents
Chapter
8
Effective Instruction of Linguistically and Culturally
Diverse Children
322
ATheoretical Framework: Two Divergent Views
324
Characteristics of Effective Schools
325
The National School Reform Perspective
331
Effective Instructional Practices
335
РИ
Becoming a Responsive Teacher. An Effective Teacher's Reflections,
in Her Own Voice
336
The SBIF Study
340
The Garcia and Related Studies
342
High Levels of Communication
342
Integrated and Thematic Curriculum
343
Interactive Cross-Age Tutoring
343
Collaborative Learning
344
Language and Literacy
345
Crowing Practice Support for a Responsive Pedagogy
348
Watsonville, California
348
Chicago
349
Los Angeles
350
Milwaukee
3 51
Arlington, Virginia
351
San
Clemente,
California
351
Dearborn, Michigan
352
PH Becoming a Responsive Teacher: A Letter Home
352
Artesia, California
353
Conclusion
353
Summary of Major Ideas
355
Extending Your Experience
357
Resources for Further Study
357
Chapter
9
Educational Approaches at the Middle and Secondary
School Level
361
Then and Now: A Personal Rendition of What Works
362
The Genesis of Project Theme
365
Project Theme: Principles and Strategies
366
Specific Activities of Project Theme
369
Professional Development for Teachers
369
Assessment Practices
369
Enhancement of Students' Academic Learning
370
Improvement of Students' Self-Esteem
370
The Results of Project Theme
371
Academic Achievement in Language, Reading, and Writing
371
Ethnographic Data on Students' Self-Concepts
372
Ethnic Identity
373
Positive Self-Esteem
373
Contents
Future
Aspirations
374
Academic Strategies and Perceptions About Schooling
377
Social Identity of Students and Parents
377
Math Achievement, Attitudes, and Self-Concepts
379
Long-Term
Effects of the Project
380
The Conclusion of Research on Project Theme
381
Rethinking, Rebuilding, and Engaging Change at the High School Level
383
Project
AVANCE
386
Reorganizing the Structure of the School
387
Outcomes of the
AVANCE
Intervention
388
Course Standards and Evaluation
389
Student-Cenerated Themes
390
Staff Networking
391
Effective Strategies and Practices
3 91
E3 Becoming a Responsive Teacher: Using Instructional Conversations
for Content-Area Learning
392
Specially Designed Academic Instruction in English (SDAIE)
394
Learning from Project
AVANCE
396
Programs That Work to Enhance College Participation
398
Student-Centered Programs
399
Early Outreach Partnerships by Colleges and Universities
399
MESA
399
School-Centered Programs
400
AVID:
U n
tracking Students
400
High School
Puente
402
Implications for Intervention Programs
406
Conclusion
408
Summary of Major Ideas
409
Extending Your Experience
410
Resources for Further Study
411
Glossary
415
References
419
Index
447 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | García, Eugene E. |
author_facet | García, Eugene E. |
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author_sort | García, Eugene E. |
author_variant | e e g ee eeg |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022761058 |
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callnumber-subject | LC - Social Aspects of Education |
classification_rvk | DO 9002 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)49963786 (DE-599)BVBBV022761058 |
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dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
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dewey-search | 370.117/0973 |
dewey-sort | 3370.117 3973 |
dewey-tens | 370 - Education |
discipline | Pädagogik |
discipline_str_mv | Pädagogik |
edition | 3rd ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV022761058 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T18:34:34Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:05:29Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0618122087 |
language | English |
lccn | 2001131498 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015966613 |
oclc_num | 49963786 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 |
owner_facet | DE-384 |
physical | xvii, 455 p. ill. : 23 cm |
publishDate | 2002 |
publishDateSearch | 2002 |
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publisher | Houghton Mifflin |
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spelling | García, Eugene E. Verfasser aut Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge Eugene García 3rd ed. Boston u.a. Houghton Mifflin 2002 xvii, 455 p. ill. : 23 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references (p. 419-445) and index Erziehung Minderheit Children of minorities Education United States Minorities Education United States Multicultural education United States Interkulturelle Erziehung (DE-588)4123440-6 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Interkulturelle Erziehung (DE-588)4123440-6 s DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Augsburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015966613&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | García, Eugene E. Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge Erziehung Minderheit Children of minorities Education United States Minorities Education United States Multicultural education United States Interkulturelle Erziehung (DE-588)4123440-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4123440-6 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge |
title_auth | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge |
title_exact_search | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge |
title_exact_search_txtP | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge |
title_full | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge Eugene García |
title_fullStr | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge Eugene García |
title_full_unstemmed | Student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge Eugene García |
title_short | Student cultural diversity |
title_sort | student cultural diversity understanding and meeting the challenge |
title_sub | understanding and meeting the challenge |
topic | Erziehung Minderheit Children of minorities Education United States Minorities Education United States Multicultural education United States Interkulturelle Erziehung (DE-588)4123440-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Erziehung Minderheit Children of minorities Education United States Minorities Education United States Multicultural education United States Interkulturelle Erziehung USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015966613&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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