Diversity

Diversity

Books

 

Videos

Books

Title

African-American Academic Achievement: Building a Classroom of Excellence
Author Bonnie M. Davis, Ph.D.
Publisher InnerPrize Publishing
Copyright 2002
Description An account of the state of African-American students in schools.  Gives strategies by which teachers can help all children.
Reference Number DV100

Title

Ask the Teacher
Author Mark Ryan
Publisher Pearson Education
Copyright 2003
Description Using a question-and-answer format, this invaluable resource is a survival guide of information for both the teacher candidate and in-service teachers.
Reference Number DV101

 

Title

Black Teachers on Teaching
Author Michele Foster
Publisher The New Press
Copyright 1997
Description Of interest not only to black teachers, parents, and school administrators, this book gives all readers frank firsthand reactions to school integration and its results for teachers and students.
Reference Number DV102

 

Title

Black Children: Their Roots, Culture, and Learning Styles
Author Janice E. Hale-Benson
Publisher The Johns Hopkins University Press
Copyright 1982
Description Draws on the fields of anthropology, sociology, history, and psychology to explore the effects of black-American culture on a child’s intellectual development and to suggest curricular reforms that would allow black children to develop their intelligence, pursue their strengths, and succeed in school and the workplace.
Reference Number DV103

 

Title

Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children
Author Betty Hart & Todd R. Risley
Publisher Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.
Copyright 1995
Description This work establishes a scientifically substantiated link between
children’s early family experience and their later intellectual
growth – a link that exists regardless of a child’s race.
Reference Number DV104

 

Title

Mirror Images: Teaching Writing in Black and White
Author Joan Krater, Jane Zeni, Nancy Devlin Cason
Publisher Heinemann
Copyright 1994
Description In the Midwestern suburb of Webster Groves, Missouri, a team of
middle and high school teachers – all female, all but one white – refused to accept the chronic underachievement of African American student writers.  Mirror Images is their story.  Through six years of action research, they realized that instead of trying to
“fix” the kids, they needed to “fix” some other things: their teaching methods, the ambience of their classrooms, and their own cultural awareness.
Reference Number DV105

 

Title

Open Lives, Safe Schools: Addressing Gay and Lesbian Issues in Education
Author Donovan R. Walling
Publisher Phi Delta Kappa Educational Foundation
Copyright 1996
Description Open Lives, Safe Schools is written for educators and others concerned about schooling, from kindergarten through graduate school.  Anti-gay discrimination affects everyone in schools.  The central premise of this diverse collection of essays is that everyone benefits when students, parents, educators, and others in the school community are allowed to live openly in terms of sexual orientation.
Reference Number DV106

 

Title

Other People’s Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom
Author Lisa Delpit
Publisher The New Press
Copyright 1995
Description Suggests that many of the academic problems attributed to children of color are actually the result of miscommunication as schools and
“other people’s children” struggle with the imbalance of power and the dynamics of inequality plaguing our system.
Reference Number DV107.1  &  DV107.2

 

Title

Women in Cross-Cultural Transitions
Author Edited by Jill M. Bystydzienski and Estelle P. Resnik
Publisher Phi Delta Kappa Education Foundation
Copyright 1995
Description This volume is the result of a collaboration of the editors and the 14 women whose cross-cultural experience it records.  The term cross-cultural transitions refers to moving across cultures, usually from one country to another or across subcultures within one society.  These are the presentations of these women at a conference entitled “Women and Cross-Cultural Transitions”.  In addition, the women students who took part in the session were interviewed by the authors.
Reference Number DV108

 

Title

Shared Values for a Troubled World: Conversations with Men and Women of Conscience
Author Rushworth M. Kidder
Publisher Jossey-Bass Publishers
Copyright

1994

Description Identifies eight universal values necessary to create the moral conditions for a sustainable twenty-first century: love, truthfulness, fairness, freedom, unity, tolerance, responsibility, and respect for life.  The global code off ethics which emerges is not, the answer. It is an answer to the primordial question about the twenty-first century: Can we, the
world’s peoples, come together on ethical common ground that doesn’t permit the human experiment to end with either a bang or a whimper?
Reference Number DV109

 

Title

International Education and the International Baccalaureate
Author George Walker
Publisher Phi Delta Kappa Educational Foundation
Copyright 2004
Description What is International Education?  This explains the IBO Programs, the IB in the USA and the future of the IBO.
Reference Number DV110FB

 

Title

What Teachers Need to Know About Islam
Author Munir A. Shaikh
Publisher Phi Delta Kappa Educational Foundation
Copyright 2005
Description This fastback is designed as a concise introduction to the commonly held teaching of Islam and the basic beliefs and practices of Muslim.
Reference Number DV111FB

 

Title

Teaching to Diversity – Teaching and Learning in the Multi-Ethnic Classroom
Author Mary Meyers
Publisher Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.
Copyright 1993
Description This introduces the latest theories and second-language acquisition along with tested teaching approaches and practices in elementary schools.  It is designed for all educators (not only English as a Second Language teachers) who wish to adapt their repertoire of skills to help recently arrived immigrants.Teaching to Diversity synthesizes current information on second-language issues in a form that is eminently practical and usable by the regular classroom teacher as well as by the ESL teacher.
Reference Number DV112                Cross Reference: ESL115

 

Title

The Dreamkeepers – Successful Teachers of African American Children
Author Gloria Ladson-Billings
Publisher Jossey-Bass. Inc.
Copyright 1994
Description Based on a study of a group of excellent teachers, this book provides
exemplars of effective teaching for African American students.  This book discusses the notion of culturally relevant teaching and its inherent conceptions of the teacher and others; of classroom social interactions; of literacy and mathematics teaching; and of knowledge itself.

  • Chapter One – An attempt to rethink teaching and learning for African Americans.
  •  Chapter Two – Discusses the growing educational and anthropological literature on ways in which a school can be made more compatible with the students’ cultural background.
  •  Chapter Three – Discusses a critical aspect of culturally relevant teaching: the teachers’ conceptions of themselves and others.
  •  Chapter Four – Discusses a second critical aspect of culturally relevant teaching: the manner in which classroom social interactions are structured.
  •  Chapter Five – Discusses the third critical aspect of culturally relevant teaching: the teachers’ concept of
    knowledge.
  •  Chapter Six – Focuses on three of the teachers in the study and their teaching of elementary literacy and
    mathematics programs.
  •  Chapter Seven – Attempts to peak in the future.
Reference Number DV113

 

Title

Introduction to Education – Teaching in a Diverse Society
Author William E. Segall & Anna V. Wilson
Publisher Prentice-Hall
Copyright 1998
Description This book is written for students who want to become teachers.  The focus of the text is to help prospective teachers grasp the essence of the classroom.

  • What You Will Learn: At the beginning of each chapter is a list of the major concepts students will learn in that chapter.
  •  Becoming a Teacher: A vignette based on professional experiences of classroom teachers and
    others helps students reflect on the major concepts presented in each chapter.  The following question challenges students to get involved in learning by reflecting on what they would do.
  •  What You Have Learned: This checklist at the end of each chapter summarizes the main concepts for easy student review.
  •  Key Terms: Terms that are important to understand or which students will use in further study and boldfaced in the chapter and defined in the Glossary.
  •  Applying What You Have Learned: Questions at the end of each chapter help students test their understanding.
  •  Applying What You Have Learned: Questions at the end of each chapter help students test their understanding.
  •  Interactive Learning: Students are presented with situations or activities that encourage them to
    learn what the chapter has introduced.  Students are expected to explore or test their leadership abilities in searching out answers.
  • Expanding Your Knowledge: This annotated list of books at the end each chapter encourages students to read more about topics they studied in the chapter.  It helps motivated students go a step beyond the course requirements.
Reference Number DV114

 

 

Videos

Title

 Diversity in the Elementary Classroom: Implications for Teaching
Author
Publisher Insight
Copyright 1995
Description  Video Workshop is an expanding library of timely, relevant staff development programs. Nationally recognized leaders convey state-of-the-art strategies and processes. It is a powerful communications tool that includes colorful illustrations, graphics, live classroom demonstrations and practical suggestions for improved instruction.
Reference Number DV001

 

Title

Encouraging Motivation Among All Students
Author Raymond Wlodkowski and Margery Ginsberg
Publisher
Copyright
Description  Volume VI, issue three of The Video Journal of Education takes and insightful look at the problem unmotivated students. This issue examines motivational principles and concepts fundamental to all children. Rather than Manipulating students to learn, educators see how to induce intrinsic motivation through implementation of dynamic classroom conditions.
Reference Number DV603

 

Title

No Excuses!  How to Increase Minority Student Achievement – Secondary Edition
Author Jamie Almanzan, James Comer, Bonnie Davis, Kati Haycock, Gary Howard, Sonia Nieto, Beverly Daniel Tatum and others
Publisher Video J
Copyright 2006
Description Introductory Program: Closing the Gaps  –  This program is designed to use with all stakeholders: administrators, board members, teachers, other staff, parents, and the community.  Includes:

  • Learn about schools that have closed their achievement gaps or are rapidly making positive change.
  • Understand equity as a foundational principle of a school that succeeds with all students.
  • Discover the Equity Framework to guide your school improvement efforts.

Program 1: Leadership  – No excuses begin with principles, administrators, and teacher leaders who:

  • Build equity among staff and students.
  • Provide clear vision and direction for all to follow.
  • Create accountability for teachers based on high expectations and support.
  • Sustain innovation through relevant and continuous professional development.

Program 2: School Culture – Schools create a culture of success by institutionalizing:

  • Responsible professional attitudes focused on high expectations.
  • A clear focus on students that establishes learning goals for all students while acknowledging
    individualized learning needs.
  • A safe and motivating inclusive environment.
  • Collaboration among teachers, students, parents, and administrators.

Program 3: Teaching & Learning – Every student succeeds when we have effective classroom teachers who focus on:

  • a standards-driven and culturally relevant curriculum.
  • Teaching skills that individually engage students daily in the instruction.
  • The use of assessment data to modify teaching based on student needs.
  • Providing interventions that support students before they fail.
Reference Number DV1503S DVD                       Cross Reference IN1503S

 

Title

No Excuses!  How to Increase Minority Student Achievement – Elementary Edition
Author Jamie Almanzan, James Comer, Bonnie Davis, Kati Haycock, Gary Howard, Sonia Nieto, Beverly Daniel Tatum and others
Publisher Video J
Copyright 2006
Description Introductory Program: Closing the Gaps  –  This program is designed to use with all stakeholders: administrators, board members, teachers, other staff, parents, and the community.  Includes:

  • Learn about schools that have closed their achievement gaps or are rapidly making positive change.
  • Understand equity as a foundational principle of a school that succeeds with all students.
  • Discover the Equity Framework to guide your school improvement efforts.

Program 1: Leadership  – No excuses begin with principles, administrators, and teacher leaders who:

  • Build equity among staff and students.
  • Provide clear vision and direction for all to follow.
  • Create accountability for teachers based on high expectations and support.
  • Sustain innovation through relevant and continuous professional development.

Program 2: School Culture – Schools create a culture of success by institutionalizing:

  •  Responsible professional attitudes focused on high expectations.
  •  A clear focus on students that establishes learning goals for all students while acknowledging individualized learning needs.
  •  A safe and motivating inclusive environment.
  • Collaboration among teachers, students, parents, and administrators.

Program 3: Teaching & Learning – Every student succeeds when we have effective classroom teachers who focus on:

  •  a standards-driven and culturally relevant curriculum.
  •  Teaching skills that individually engage students daily in the instruction.
  •  The use of assessment data to modify teaching based on student needs.
  • Providing interventions that support students before they fail.
Reference Number DV1503E DVD                       Cross Reference IN1503E

 

 

Title

 Diversity in the Classroom
Author  Carlos Cortes
Publisher Video J
Copyright
Description Video 1 Highlights:A multicultural education model is presented which:

  •  Empowers students, irrespective of racial, ethnic, or cultural diversity.
  •  Helps all students function successfully in mainstream society.
  •  Nurtures positive interaction with persons from diverse backgrounds.
  •  Draws upon and develops unique, individual ethnic resources.
  •  Prepares all youngsters to make contributions to society.
  • The model includes 4 dimensions: Mainstream empowerment, intergroup understanding, group resource, civic commitment

Video 2 Highlights:

  • Multicultural education brings to focus both differences and similarities; things that unite all people and things that make them unique.
  •  A curriculum model is presented which balances five positions in multicultural education.
  •  Schools with little or no cultural diversity must still prepare their students to enter an expanding multicultural
    society and shrinking globe.
  •  Diversity of cultures adds richness to a society, not just issues to be resolved.
  •  Multicultural education can contribute to better intergroup understanding, but cannot be expected to be a quick panacea for racism and bigotry.
  • Using curriculum to help students understand cultural diversity will inhibit the belief that one group of people is superior to another.
Reference Number DVV3-8