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If you have ever been apprehensive about initiating classroom discussion, fearing silences, the domination of a couple of speakers, superficial contributions, or off-topic remarks, this book provides strategies for creating a positive learning experience.
At a time when divisiveness and racism are on the rise, the need and demand for diversity training and trainers has never been greater. The authors conceived this book in response to constant requests for advice on how to develop a career as diversity consultants. This succinct cookbook provides the guidance to get you going and succeed.
Through 26 narratives of individuals from poor and working class backgrounds - ranging from students, to multiple levels of administrators, and faculty, both tenured and non-tenured - this book provides a vivid understanding of how people can experience and straddle class in the middle, upper, or even elitist class contexts of the academy.
There is an increasing understanding that performance poetry and spoken word is much more than entertainment. This book - compiled by scholar artists, including internationally recognised spoken word performers - offers guidance to student affairs professionals on using spoken word as a tool for college student engagement, activism, and civic awareness.
Drawing on research and insights from several academic disciplines and community partner perspectives, along with the authors' decades of applied, community-based development and education experience, they present a model of community-based global learning that clearly espouses an equitable balance between learning methodology and a community development philosophy.
Proposes a newly defined organizational development role for academic and faculty developers and directors of teaching and learning centres. The strategies outlined provide a practical resource for re-examining the mission and structure of existing centres and to develop their role as change agents.
For teachers in higher education who haven't been able to catch up with developments in teaching and learning, James Davis and Bridget Arend offer an introduction that focusses on seven coherent and proven evidence-based strategies. The underlying rationale is to provide a framework to match teaching goals to distinct ways of learning, based on well-established theories of learning.
Are cultural centers ethnic enclaves of segregation, or safe havens that provide minority students with social support that promotes persistence and retention? This book provides perspectives on culture centers from the point of view of various racial/ethnic identity groups, Latina/o, Asian, American Indian, and African American.
A 2023 SPE Outstanding Book Award Winner In Justice for Black Students: Black Principals Matter, Kofi Lomotey begins with a two-pronged premise: (1) Black students do not receive a quality education in US public (or private) schools, and (2) Black principals, like Black teachers, can make a positive impact on the academic and overall success of Black students. Through the chronicling of his own work over 50 years--as a practitioner and an academic--Lomotey puts forth this argument with a focus on Black principals. In this book, he positions his 1993 coining of the term ethno-humanism--a role identity which he attributes to successful Black principals--as a fundamental/critical component of the leadership of these principals. In reprinting three of his earlier articles and sharing new information (including a review of the literature on Black male principals), he provides a broad-based description of this role identity and then links it to the more recent concepts of culturally responsive/culturally relevant teaching/pedagogy and culturally responsive/culturally relevant school leadership, before describing the implications for Black students of his own work and of other research that has been conducted on Black principals. This volume is essential reading for all educators interested in seeing a significant improvement in the academic and overall success of Black students. Preservice teachers, practitioners, and administrators will find enormous value in the book's message. Perfect for courses such as: Introduction to Education │ Leadership for Equity andSocial Justice in Education │ Black Education │ MulticulturalEducation │School Leadership │ Culturally Responsive Leadership
Reconceptualizes qualitative research as an in-relations process, one that is centred on, fully concerned with, and lifts up, those who have been and continue to be dispossessed, harmed, dehumanized, suffered, and erased because of white supremacy, settler colonialism, or other hegemonic world views.
Based on the authors' extensive experience and research, this book provides an introduction to the key principles, steps, and strategies to implement student peer review. It addresses common challenges that faculty and students encounter, and offers a rigorously tested three-part protocol to use before, during, and after a peer review session.
Despite continued growth in enrolments, graduate program attrition rates are of great concern to academic program coordinators. It is estimated that only 40 to 50% of students who begin PhD programs complete their degrees. This book describes programs, initiatives, and interventions that lead to overall student retention and success.
Developed from a research over the past decade, this book posits that while teachers, parents and governments are focused on protecting children, what is often neglected is children's own agency and capacity to engage with mobile technologies in ways that support them in pursuing their own interests, pleasures and learning.
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