Toward the Multicultural University
By (Author) Gale Auletta
By (author) Benjamin P. Bowser
By (author) Terry Jones
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
Ethnic studies
Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism
378.0089
Hardback
224
This book moves the controversy over multiculturalism in higher education from primarily an ideological debate to practical and concrete considerations. The first part outlines the demographic and historic realities that will make some form of multicultural education necessary in the coming century. The second part provides examples of how selective aspects of North American co-cultures (e.g., Native American and Puerto Rican) could be central to reforming curriculum and instruction. The final part provides practical and concrete suggestions and proposals for how to improve teaching, administration, and student outcomes in higher education by making them domestically and internationally multicultural. It becomes apparent that the need for greater multiculturalism is part of a long history of higher education in the United States as it has responded to cultural and social change, and that there is no inherent reason why the university community cannot include in its core organization and mission the wisdom of multiple culturesEuropean, African, Native American, and Asian.
BENJAMIN P. BOWSER is Associate Professor of Sociology and Social Services at California State University, Hayward. He is co-editor of Impacts of Racism on White Americans (1981), Black Male Adolescents (1991), and Confronting Diverse Issues on Campus (1993). TERRY JONES is Professor of Sociology and Social Services at California State University, Hayward. GALE AULETTA YOUNG is Professor of Communications at California State University, Hayward.