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Culturally Proficient Practice

Supporting Educators of English Learning Students
By: Reyes L. Quezada, Delores B. Lindsey, Randall B. Lindsey

Foreword by Donaldo Macedo

With this powerful guide, educators learn how to improve the academic success of English learners by putting culturally proficient practices to work in their classroom and schools.

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9781452217291
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2012
  • Page Count: 208
  • Publication date: August 30, 2012
Price: $40.95
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Description

Description

Help your English learning students achieve academic success!

U.S. demographics are quickly shifting, and it is more important than ever to reach and teach English learning students. Designed to empower educators to become agents of change in their classrooms, schools, and communities, this guide introduces the principles of Cultural Proficiency and how they can help improve educators' ability to effectively teach English language learners. This book features:

  • Activities that build core Cultural Proficiency skills and promote personal transformation
  • A chapter-by-chapter rubric for working effectively with English learning students
  • A conversation-starting case story featuring the River View School District
  • Strategies for using action research to improve the success of English learning students

By focusing on Cultural Proficiency—and the underlying causes of EL achievement gaps—educators can uncover ways to break down academic barriers and use students' cultural background as educational assets.

"This is a valuable resource for staff developers creating culturally proficient learning environments to close the achievement gap. This work focuses on English learning students with the same 'inside out' approach as the authors' previous work. A perfect asset for a professional learning community book study!"
—Linda Fisher, Staff Development Coordinator
Lincoln Unified School District, Stockton, CA

"The book provides the school leader with the tools to engage themselves and others in making English learning students a priority. It is a must read for educators to get those hard and healthy conversations started and to examine our school practices and policies."
—Lori Henderson, Assistant Superintendent of Educational Services
Manitoba, Canada


Key features

  • Applies the Cultural Proficiency framework and tools to the challenge of narrowing achievement gaps between ELs and their non-EL counterparts.
  • Presents an asset-based approach to working ELs that counters the perspective that students from non-English speaking backgrounds come to school with certain deficits that prevent them from learning
  • Provides educators with the knowledge and skills to maximize educational opportunities for all students, independent of students' primary language.
  • Includes a running case story of cultural identity exploration and discovery as a guide for the reader to consider themselves within the context of the classrooms, schools and communities they serve.
  • Features an English Learner Instruction Rubric that illustrates ineffective-to-effective instructional approaches and ineffective-to-effective supporting coaching and leadership approaches.
  • Introduces action research as a model for leaders, coaches and teachers to utilize their own school districts, schools, and classrooms as centers of research on best practices to increase the academic achievement of English language learners.  
Author(s)

Author(s)

Reyes L. Quezada photo

Reyes L. Quezada

Dr. Reyes L. Quezada was born in San Juan De Los Lagos, Jalisco, Mexico. His family of 8 immigrated to the United States and settled in Southern California in a farm near the Mexican border by Brawley. He was seven years old. His father was a farmworker and participated in the Bracero Program (Guest worker) in the early 1960’s, his mother was a stay home mom who provided a caring and loving environment for his brothers and sisters. He has been a teacher, community college counselor and teacher educator for the past thirty-eight years, twenty of those years as a professor. He joined the University of San Diego, San Diego California in 1999. He has been a professor at the University of Redlands, and California State University Stanislaus. He holds Community College credentials in Counselor Education, Supervision, Psychology, and a California Multiple-Subjects Bilingual Emphasis Teaching credential-Spanish. His degrees include a Bachelor of Arts from San Jose State University and a Minor in Mexican American Studies, and holds four Advanced Degrees-a Masters degree in Education from the University of San Diego, and a Masters degree from San Diego State University, a post Masters degree-Educational Specialist degree from Point Loma Nazarene College and a doctorate from Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona.

Dr. Quezada has presented at international, national, and state conferences (France, Spain, South Africa, Mexico, Costa Rica, Middle East, Italy, England, Colombia, Canada, Hong Kong, Thailand, Cambodia, Philippines, Czech Republic, Greece, Ghana, and in Israel). His teaching, research and publications are on issues of cultural proficiency, equity, international education, diversity, family school and community engagement, bilingual education and migrant education. His publications include four books, twenty journal articles and eleven book chapters. He has edited five themed journals on internationalizing colleges and schools of education for the Catholic Education Journal, Teacher Education Quarterly, and in Teaching Education, as well as on Family, School and Community Engagement and Partnerships in the journals Teaching Education and Multicultural Education.

He is on the board of directors for state, national and international organizations including the national Council of Educator Preparation Programs (CAEP), the American Association for Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE), and the current Chair of the International Council for the Education of Teachers (ICET). He was the Co-chair of the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing-Committee on Accreditation (COA), and was Associate Editor for Teacher Education Quarterly, and sits on many editorial and review boards including the Annual Editions of Multicultural Education, Teacher Education Quarterly, Issues in Teacher Education, the School Community Journal, the Journal of Hispanics in Higher Education, Educational Research Journal, Teacher Education Quarterly, Horizon, the Journal of International Studies, and Issues in Teacher Education. He was on the San Bernardino County-Third District Supervisor Representative to the Equal Opportunity Commission, and former School Board President and current member for Real Journey Academies Charter School in San Bernardino, California.


Delores B. Lindsey photo

Delores B. Lindsey

Dr. Delores B. Lindsey retired as Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership at California State University San Marcos; however, she has not retired from the education profession. Her primary focus is developing culturally proficient leaders. She helps educational leaders examine their organizations’ policies and practices, and their individual beliefs and values about cross-cultural communication. Her message to her audiences focuses on viewing, creating, and managing socially just educational practices, culturally proficient leadership practice, and diversity as an asset to be nurtured. Her favorite reflective question is: Are we who we say we are? Delores and husband Randall, her favorite Sage/Corwin author, continue to co-write about the application of the four Tools of Cultural Proficiency. Her most recent publication, which is on the Bestseller list from Corwin, is Leading While Female, A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity, with Trudy Arriaga and Stacie Stanley.

Randall B. Lindsey photo

Randall B. Lindsey

Randall B. Lindsey is Emeritus Professor at California State University, Los Angeles. He has served as a teacher, an administrator, executive director of a non-profit corporation, as Interim Dean at California Lutheran University, as Distinguished Educator in Residence at Pepperdine University, and as Chair of the Education Department at the University of Redlands. All of Randy’s experiences have been in working with diverse populations and his area of study is the behavior of white people in multicultural settings. His Ph.D. is in Educational Leadership from Georgia State University, his Master of Arts in Teaching is in History Education from the University of Illinois, and his B.S. in Social Science Education is from Western Illinois University. He has served as a junior high school and high school teacher and as an administrator in charge of school desegregation efforts. At Cal State, L.A. he served as Chair of the Division of Administration and Counseling and as Director of the Regional Assistance Centers for Educational Equity, a regional race desegregation assistance center. With co-authors he has written several books and articles on applying the Cultural Proficiency Framework in various contexts.

Email – randallblindsey@gmail.com
Website - CCPEP.org
Twitter - @RBLindsey41
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword by Donaldo Macedo


Acknowledgments


About the Authors


Introduction


Part I. The Context and Tools for Educating English Learning Students


1. Setting the Context

Getting Centered

Going Deeper

2. The Tools of Cultural Proficiency

Getting Centered

Going Deeper

3. Educators' Rubric for Support of English Learning Students and Their Communities: Changing the Conversation

Getting Centered

Going Deeper

Part II. River View School District: A Context for Educating Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Students


4. Assessing Cultural Knowledge: You, Your School, and Your Community

Getting Centered

Assessing Cultural Knowledge

Using the Rubric: Assessing and Developing Your Cultural Knowledge About Self, School, and Community

River View Case Story

Professional Learning for General Educators Who Teach English Learning Students

Going Deeper

6. Managing the Dynamics of Difference: You, Your School, and Your Community

Getting Centered

Managing the Dynamics of Difference for Me, My School, and My Community

Using the Rubric: Managing the Dynamics of Difference for Self, School, and Community

River View Case Story: The Middle School in Conflict

River View Case Story: The Clash of the Coteachers

Professional Learning Through Inquiry Helps Manage the Dynamics of Differences

Going Deeper

7. Adapting to Diversity: You, Your School, and Your Community

Getting Centered

Adapting to Diversity for Me, My School, and My Community 101 Mindfulness

Using the Rubric: Adapting to the Diversity of Your School and Community

River View Case Story: Confronting Barriers to a Community in Transition

River View Case Story: Parents as Change Partners

Professional Learning for General Educators Who Teach English Learning Students

Going Deeper

8. Institutionalizing Cultural Knowledge: You, Your School, and Your Community

Getting Centered

Institutionalizing Cultural Knowledge for Me, My School, and My Community

Using the Rubric: Institutionalizing Cultural Knowledge About Your School and Community

River View Case Story: Benchmarking Along the Way

Professional Learning for General Educators Who Teach English Learning Students

Going Deeper

Part III. Next Steps


9. Guiding Your Own Research That Leads to Action

Getting Started

Action Research: A Model for Improvement of Practice for You, Your School, and the Community Served by Your School

Educators as Practitioner Researchers in Support of English Learning Students

Action Research Through a Culturally Proficient Practitioner Researcher Lens

Action Research Cycle Rubric for Culturally Proficient Practitioner Researchers

Action Research Getting Started Protocol

Closing Thoughts

Questions for Reflection

Resource A. Professional Learning Activity - Assessing Cultural Knowledge


Resource B. Professional Learning Activity - Valuing Diversity


Resource C. Professional Learning Activity - Managing the Dynamics of Difference


Resource D. Professional Learning Activity - Adapting to Diversity


Resource E. Professional Learning Activity - Institutionalizing Cultural Knowledge


Resource F. Recommended Books on Instructional Strategies


Matrix: How to Use Cultural Proficiency Books


References


Index


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Reviews

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.