Turn challenges into opportunities With this outstanding collection of chapters by leading scholars and researchers in the field, you can develop the knowledge and skills needed to maximize the opportunities that diversity offers while minimizing its challenges. You’ll explore current and emerging research, concepts, debates, and teaching strategies for educating students from different cultural, racial, ethnic, language, gender, social class, and religious groups.
I just read this book for my Multicultural Education course. I thought the textbook was easy to read and follow. I thought it provided good ideas and strategies for teachers that teach diverse classrooms. Overall, I would recommend this textbook to future, novice, and current teachers or anyone who is interested in Multicultural Education.
I really enjoyed this textbook. The only reason it doesn't get higher than a 3 star from me is because the tone of the text really started to bother me. It felt as though they were speaking to me as if I were a child for a large portion of the text and that really rubbed me the wrong way. However, the information that is covered and the topics discussed in this text are CRUCIAL for any educator to have a firm foundation in. It really opened my eyes to what needs to be happening in my classroom that is not currently there. It also helped me with planning a lot of my curriculum for the fall semester - especially since I teach American Lit and the literary canon is nowhere even close to diverse. I am very excited to apply what I have learned from this text.
This is not light reading. I read this for for a diversity class, and found it very well worth my time. I would recommend this for college level readers. Even if you feel that you are a person who is aware of multicultural issues, this book will have new information for you.
I appreciated the number of topics addressed. I wished in part a few were more readable, I have read the articles referenced within and I found it to be too overdigested in parts or just spouting research in others. Overall I think it addresses important issues, and I liked some chapters better than others.
There is no way I could have read this straight through. But, despite how much I hate admitting it. I enjoyed reading parts of it for class and it made me think. Grrrr.