African Immigrants' Experiences in American Schools: Complicating the Race Discourse

African Immigrants' Experiences in American Schools: Complicating the Race Discourse

African Immigrants' Experiences in American Schools: Complicating the Race Discourse

African Immigrants' Experiences in American Schools: Complicating the Race Discourse

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Overview

As the number of African-born students in American schools increases, it is important that schools enlarge the circle of diversity to include African-born students who are rendered invisible by their skin color and continent of origin.. African Immigrants’ Experiences in American Schools: Complicating the Race Discourse is aimed at filling the gap in the literature about African-born students in American schools. This book will not only assist teachers and administrators in understanding the nuanced cultural, sociological, and socio-cognitive differences between American-born and African-born students; it will also equip them with effective interpersonal teaching strategies adapted to the distinct needs of African-born students and others like them. The book explores in depth salient African-rooted factors that come into play in the social and academic integration of African immigrant students, such as gender, spirituality, colonization, religious affiliation, etc. The authors examine American-rooted factors that complicate the adaptation of these students in the US educational school system, such as institutional racism, Afrophobia, Islamophobia, cultural discontinuities, curricular mismatches, and western media mis-portrayals. They also proffer pedagogical tools and frameworks that may help minimize these deleterious factors.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498510721
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 10/12/2016
Series: Race and Education in the Twenty-First Century
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 146
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Shirley Mthethwa-Sommers is associate professor of social and psychological foundations of education at Nazareth College in Rochester, New York, where she also serves as director of the Center for Urban Education.

Immaculée Harushimana is associate professor of TESOL and English education at Lehman College, City University of New York.

Table of Contents

Contents

Series Foreword
by Kenneth Fasching-Varner, Roland Mitchell, and Lori L. Martin
Foreword
by Mojúbàolú Olufúnké Okome
Introduction
Chapter 1: Why an invisible surge of African Immigrants
Chapter 2: Complicating race discourse: African-born studentsIn U.S. schools
Chapter 3: Educational Systems in Pre-colonial, Colonial and Post-colonial Africa
Chapter 4: Affirming African Philosophies, Epistemologies and Worldviews
Chapter 5: Spirituality, Religion and Schooling of African-born Students
Chapter 6: Language Politics and the Education of African-born Students
Chapter 7: Gender and Education Matters in African Contexts
Chapter 8: Conclusion: Empowering Pedagogical Practices
About the Authors
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