Objectives:
When you finish studying this chapter, you should be able to:
- Describe the status of racial segregation in U.S. schools before and since 1954.
- Distinguish between de jure and de facto segregation.
- Describe evolving desegregation law, the major obstacles to desegregation, and the major components of desegregation plans.
- Describe the desegregation of nonblack minorities, particularly Hispanic students.
- Describe the effects of desegregation on student performance and attitudes.
- Identify the components of compensatory education and their importance in educating disadvantaged students.
- Describe early and more recent conclusions of research on the effectiveness of compensatory education programs.
- Identify and analyze fundamental questions about the ability of compensatory education programs to equalize educational opportunities for students with disadvantages.
- Describe the concepts of multicultural education and cultural pluralism.
- Describe and assess various aspects of multicultural instruction, including instruction responsive to student leaning styles and dialect differences, bilingual education, multiethnic curriculum and instruction, and recent controversies regarding multicultural programs.
- Identify and analyze future issues in multicultural education.
- Understand and describe some of the challenges in providing equal opportunity for students with disabilities.
Focus and Refocus Questions:
When you finish studying this chapter, you should be able to answer the following questions from your textbook:
Focus Questions
- What are the rationales for desegregation, compensatory education, multicultural education, and education of children with disabilities?
- What are the major obstacles and approaches in desegregating the schools?
- What are the major approaches to compensatory education?
- What is multicultural education? What forms does it take in elementary and secondary schools? What are its major benefits and dangers?
- What does the law say about providing education for students with disabilities? What are the major issues in their education?
Refocus Questions
- Were the schools you attended well integrated, or did one racial or ethnic group predominate? Do you want to teach in a school with enrollment similar to that where you attended, or with differing enrollment? Why?
- Do you think you are or will be well prepared to teach students who receive or should receive compensatory services? What might you do to be better prepared?
- In what ways are you preparing to work with students from a variety of cultural and linguistic backgrounds? How might you benefit as a teacher from knowing more about the cultural background of students different from yourself?
- What aspects of working with inclusion students do you believe will be most challenging for you, as a teacher? What are you doing now to prepare for the challenges?