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E-grāmata: Refugee and Immigrant Students

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The focus of this book is on educational equity issues affecting immigrants and refugees around the world. Chapters highlight educational approaches that build from experiential knowledge, draw upon multiple languages, consider group identity, grapple with the complexities of inclusion, address family concerns, promote parental involvement, involve liaison with community agencies, and view cultural differences as educational strengths. While the book does not shy away from exploring the more challenging aspects of the refugee and immigrant experience, it avoids dwelling on victimology and rejects applying a deficit framework. Rather it offers hope, emphasizing the potential strengths of refugees, including their cultural capital and survival skills. The authors also make cogent suggestions for structural, pedagogical, and conceptual reform, with targets ranging from individual teachers to educational systems to social, economic, political, and cultural contexts.



This book addresses educational equity for immigrants and refugees, highlighting approaches that leverage experiential knowledge, multiple languages, and cultural strengths. It emphasizes hope and potential, offering suggestions for reform across various contexts, from individual teachers to broader systems.

Acknowledgements vii
Foreword: For My Grandparents ix
Carlos E. Cortes
Introduction: Education for Immigrants and Refugees: Creating Equitable Pathways for the Future xiii
Florence E. McCarthy
Margaret H. Vickers
PART I PEDAGOGICAL INITIATIVES ADDRESSING ISSUES OF EDUCATIONAL EQUITY FOR IMMIGRANTS AND REFUGEES
1 Positioning Refugee Students as Intellectual Class Members
3(18)
Karen Dooley
2 Creating Shared Learning Spaces: An Intercultural, Multilingual Early Learning Program for Preschool Children from Refugee Families
21(22)
Anna Kirova
3 Refugees as Educators: The Potential for Positive Impact on Educational Systems
43(22)
Susan Banki
4 Identity and Inclusion: Education in Refugee Camps in Thailand
65(24)
Su-Ann Oh
PART II REFUGEE AND IMMIGRANT SCHOOL-COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS
5 Still Far to Go: Systematic Programming for Immigrant and Refugee Children and Youth
89(18)
Marian J. Rossiter
Tracey M. Derwing
6 Serving the Needs of Refugee Children and Families through a Culturally Appropriate Liaison Service
107(20)
J. Lynn McBrien
Jillian Ford
7 Schools at the Crossroads of Competing Expectations
127(18)
Linda Silka
PART III SYSTEMIC ISSUES AND POLICIES FOR REFUGEE AND IMMIGRANT EDUCATIONAL EQUITY
8 Australia's New Arrivals Policy and the Need to Reform Refugee Education Provision
145(22)
Florence E. McCarthy
Margaret H. Vickers
9 Equity in Education for Migrant and Refugee Children: Issues from the United Kingdom
167(22)
Jill Rutter
10 Post-Primary Education Dilemmas in Protracted Refugee Situations
189(16)
Timothy Brown
11 Learning from the Education Programs for Sri Lankan Refugee Students in India
205(22)
K. C. Saha
About the Contributors 227