Gentrification and Bilingual Education


A Texas TWBE School across Seven Years

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Sale price$180.00
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Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
By: Edited by Deborah K. Palmer, Suzanne Garcia-Mateus, Contributions by Melissa Adams-Corral, Foreword by Claudia Cervantes-Soon, Contributions by Suzanne Garcia-Mateus, Dan Heiman, Epilogue by Claudia Kramer-Santamaria, Contributions by Christopher Milk-Bonilla, Michelle Mott, Deborah K. Palmer
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
226

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Description

Suzanne Garcia-Mateus is assistant professor and the director of the Monterey Institute for English Learners at California State University - Monterey Bay. Deborah K. Palmer is professor of equity, bilingualism and biliteracy in the School of Education at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Chapter 1Hillside Elementary, Our Research Collaborative, Gentrification, and TWBE in Texas Chapter 2Espacios de confianza: Affectively and Systemically Resisting Color-blind Ideologies in TWBE Home-school Planning Chapter 3"The Dual Language Program Changes Everything": The First Year of TWBE at Hillside and the (Re)negotiation of a School's Identity Chapter 4"I feel it's not about ability, it's about power." Bilingual Teachers' Interpretation of a Gentrifying Two-way Immersion Program Chapter 5"Tenemos que seguir nuestra cultura": Whiteness as Property at Hillside Elementary and Sam Houston Middle Schools Chapter 6Spaces of Resistance, Hope, and Justice: Centering the Foundational Goal of Critical Consciousness at Hillside Chapter 7From Tamales and Mole to Pizza and Pasta: Where Went the Neighborhood, So Goes the School Chapter 8!Adelante!

This book is essential reading for educators, parents, and policy makers interested in establishing Dual Language Bilingual Education programs. Focusing on a single school viewed over a seven-year period, the chapters describe the very serious social justice challenges surrounding gentrification and tell a compelling story about the ways that sincere efforts to build an inclusive school can still result in re-centering whiteness and marginalizing low-income children and their families. -- Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University

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