Immigrant Students and Literacy: Reading, Writing, and Remembering

Immigrant Students and Literacy: Reading, Writing, and Remembering

by Gerald Campano
Immigrant Students and Literacy: Reading, Writing, and Remembering

Immigrant Students and Literacy: Reading, Writing, and Remembering

by Gerald Campano

eBook

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Overview

This powerful book demonstrates how culturally responsive teaching can make learning come alive. Drawing on his experience as a fifth-grade teacher in a multiethnic school where children spoke over 14 different home languages, the author reveals how he created a language arts curriculum from the students’ own rich cultural resources, narratives, and identities. Illustrating the challenges and possibilities of teaching and learning in a large urban school, this book:

  • Documents how a culturally engaged pedagogy improved student achievement and increased standardized test scores.
  • Examines the literacy practices of children from immigrant, migrant, and refugee backgrounds, and includes powerful examples of their voices and writing.
  • Provides an invaluable model of reflective practice, including a wide array of student-centered strategies, to generate powerful learning experiences
  • Demonstrates a way for teachers to tap into the various forms of literacy students practice beyond the borders of the classroom.

“Campano illustrates what it takes to be a teacher with heart and soul, not simply one who succumbs to the increasing calls for higher test scores and standardized curricula. . . . There are many lessons to be learned from this gem of a book.”
—From the Foreword by Sonia Nieto, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

“Campano shows us what we can do—what we must all learn to do—to restore children’s full humanity to the center of U.S. literacy education.”
—Patricia Enciso, The Ohio State University


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807778364
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 09/06/2019
Series: Practitioner Inquiry Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Gerald Campano is an assistant professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, School of Education.

Table of Contents


Foreword   Sonia Nieto     xi
Preface     xiii
Acknowledgments     xvii
Introduction: The National Mythology and Urban Teaching     1
"United in Diversity": The Rhetoric and Reality     1
Classroom Practice and Cultural Context     3
This Book and Its Organization     5
The Power of Inquiry
"From the Heart to the World and Back Again": Negotiating the Boundaries     9
From the Location of the Classroom     9
From the Location of the University     11
From the Location of My Past     12
Back to the Urban Classroom     14
A Professional Community     16
The Power of Stories     17
Celso's Secret Box: Creating Community Through Shared Stories     20
The Manongs and Manangs     21
Different Paths, Different Stories     22
Celso's Story     22
Creating Community Through Narrative     25
"It's What We Have Survived"     26
Nurturing     27
Schooling     28
Carmen's Unwritten Story: Failing Our Students with Remediation     31
Discovering Carmen's Roles     31
Carmen's Father     33
Carmen's Unwritten Story     36
Schooling as Exclusion     38
The Second Classroom     39
Literacy Practices in the "Second Classroom"
"We Are Strong and Sturdy in the Heart": Redefining Accountability     45
Residential Stigma     46
The Neighborhood Writes Back     48
"I Will Tell You a Little Bit About My People": Narrating Immigrant Pasts     52
Necessary Silences     53
Silencing in Schools     54
From Silence to Voice     55
Intergenerational Storytelling     56
Narratives of Survival     59
Learning to Listen     68
"They Came Here for Their Lives": Writing Transnational Identities     72
Maria: Writing from, a Balikbayan Perspective     72
"I'm Going to Talk to You About Myself": School Literacy as Reflection     74
"This Was a Day That Had Swollen My Heart": School Literacy as Empathy     80
"Part of My Life Was Refilled into My Mind": School Literacy as Correspondence     85
Reaching Beyond the School Curriculum     88
Dancing Across Borders: Performing Identities     90
The Personal as Professional     91
"The World Outside Our Door Was Foreign"     92
Lesson Plans: Girl Talk and Teatro     94
"Cuando Todos Somos Iguales!" (When We Are All Equal!)     96
What the Teacher Didn't Know     98
Community Through Transgression     101
The Process of Inquiry
Continuing Stories     107
Systematic Improvisation: A Way of Teaching and Researching     112
Commitment to Inquiry     113
The Teacher Researcher as an Emergent Professional and Activist Identity     115
Our Literacy Curriculum     118
References     121
Index     125
About the Author     135

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Campano illustrates what it takes to be a teacher with heart and soul, not simply one who succumbs to the increasing calls for higher test scores and standardized curricula….There are many lessons to be learned from this gem of a book.”
—From the Foreword by Sonia Nieto, University of Massachusetts at Amherst


“Campano shows us what we can do—what we must all learn to do—to restore children's full humanity to the center of U.S. literacy education.”
Patricia Enciso, The Ohio State University

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