3rd Edition

Language, Culture, and Teaching Critical Perspectives

By Sonia Nieto Copyright 2018
    246 Pages
    by Routledge

    246 Pages
    by Routledge

    Distinguished multiculturalist Sonia Nieto speaks directly to current and future teachers in this thoughtful integration of a selection of her key writings with creative pedagogical features. Offering information, insights, and motivation to teach students of diverse cultural, racial, and linguistic backgrounds, examples are included throughout to illustrate real-life dilemmas about diversity that teachers face in their own classrooms; ideas about how language, culture, and teaching are linked; and ways to engage with these ideas through reflection and collaborative inquiry. Designed for upper-undergraduate and graduate-level students and professional development courses, each chapter includes critical questions, classroom activities, and community activities suggesting projects beyond the classroom context.

    Language, Culture, and Teaching

    • explores how language and culture are connected to teaching and learning in educational settings;

    • examines the sociocultural and sociopolitical contexts of language and culture to understand how these contexts may affect student learning and achievement;

    • analyzes the implications of linguistic and cultural diversity for classroom practices, school reform, and educational equity;

    • encourages practicing and preservice teachers to reflect critically on their classroom practices, as well as on larger institutional policies related to linguistic and cultural diversity based on the above understandings; and

    • motivates teachers to understand their ethical and political responsibilities to work, together with their students, colleagues, and families, for more socially just classrooms, schools, and society.

    Changes in the Third Edition:

    This edition includes new and updated chapters, section introductions, critical questions, classroom and community activities, and resources, bringing it up-to-date in terms of recent educational policy issues and demographic changes in the U.S. and beyond. The new chapters reflect Nieto’s current thinking about the profession and society, especially about changes in the teaching profession, both positive and negative, since the publication of the second edition of this text.

    Introduction: Language, Literacy, and Culture: Aha! Moments in Personal and Sociopolitical Understanding

    Part I: Setting the Groundwork

    Chapter 1: What is the Purpose of Schools? Reflections on Education in an Age of Functionalism

    Chapter 2: Multicultural Education and School Reform

    Chapter 3: Revisiting the High Hopes and Broken Promises of Public Education: Still an Uncertain Future

    Part II: Identity, Learning, and Belonging

    Chapter 4: Culture and Learning

    Chapter 5: Lessons from Students on Creating a Chance to Dream

    Chapter 6: The BC 44, Ethnic Studies, and Transformative Education

    Part III: Developing a Critical Stance

    Chapter 7: Profoundly Multicultural Questions

    Chapter 8: Affirmation, Solidarity, and Critique: Moving Beyond Tolerance in Multicultural Education

    Chapter 9: Becoming Sociocultural Mediators: What All Educators Can Learn from Bilingual and ESL Teachers

    Part IV: Praxis, Hope. And the Future

    Chapter 10: Nice is Not Enough: Defining Caring for Students of Color

    Chapter 11: Doing Their Part: Teachers as Leaders in Multicultural Education

    Chapter 12: Critical Hope… In Spite of it All

    Biography

    Sonia Nieto is Professor Emerita of Language, Literacy and Culture at the College of Education, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA.