Multicultural Teaching in the University
By (Author) Linda Frankel
By (author) Edith Lewis
By (author) David L. Schoem
By (author) Ximena Zuniga
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th January 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
Ethnic studies
Cultural studies
378.125
Hardback
376
This book for college teachers, administrators, trainers, workshop leaders and prospective secondary school teachers looks at challenges of teaching in institutions and classrooms that are increasingly diverse. The volume's introductory chapter, which discusses the meaning of multicultural teaching, is followed by more than 20 essays, each articulating the multiple dimensions and components of multicultural teaching. They discuss their own teaching and classes in terms of course content, process and discourse, and diversity among faculty and students in the classroom. The book concludes with a round-table discussion by the authors about the meaning of multicultural teaching, a section on responses to questions about conflict in the classroom, and a list of exercises for classroom and workshop use. Rather than representing a homogeneous view of multicultural teaching, this volume reflects the debate and dialogue that surround the issue. While colleges and their faculty are searching to adapt their teaching to the rapidly changing demographics on campus, there are very few models for teachers. "Multicultural Teaching in the University" integrates new scholarship that reflects a more expansive notion of knowledge, and suggests new ways to communicate with diverse populations of students.
An excellent book for faculty; graduate students; professionals.-Choice
"An excellent book for faculty; graduate students; professionals."-Choice
DAVID SCHOEM is Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Education in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Lecturer in Sociology and a core faculty member in the Program for Conflict Management Alternatives at the University of Michigan. LINDA FRANKEL has been a Scholar-in-Residence in the Women's Studies Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, consults on curricular innovation, and served as the first coordinator of FAIRteach at the University of Michigan. XIMENA ZUNIGA is Program Director of the Intergroup Relations and Conflict Program at the University of Michigan, and also teaches in in the Pilot Program and Women's Studies Program. EDITH A. LEWIS is an Associate Professor of Social Work, holds an adjunct position in the Women's Studies Program at the University of Michigan, and is Chair of the Ethnic Minorities Section of the National Council on Family Relations.