and Overview.- and Overview.- Culturally Diverse Families and Schooling.- Fostering Latino Parent Involvement in the Schools: Practices and Partnerships.- Parenting, Social-Emotional Development, and School Achievement of African American Youngsters.- Asian Pacific American Cultural Capital: Understanding Diverse Parents and Students.- Histories, Issues of Immigration, and Schooling Experiences.- The Mobility/Social Capital Dynamic: Understanding Mexican American Families and Students.- Educational Attainment of Immigrant and Non-Immigrant Young Blacks.- Divergent Origins and Destinies: Children of Asian Immigrants.- Socio-cultural Issues on Teaching, Learning, and Development.- Educational Issues and Effective Practices for Hispanic Students.- Improving the Schooling Experiences of African American Students.- The Truth and Myth of the Model Minority: The Case of Hmong Americans.- Conclusion and Recommendations.
Susan J. Paik is Associate Professor at the School of
Educational Studies at Claremont Graduate University. Her research
interests include urban and international studies, educational
productivity, family-school partnerships, minority learning,
research methods and evaluation. She has participated in education
projects in Africa, Asia, Central America, Europe, and the U.S,
where she founded and directed a character-development program for
inner city children and youth. Dr. Paik has presented her work at
the annual meetings of the American Educational Research
Association (AERA), Oxford University in England, University of
Cape Town in South Africa, University of Bologna in Italy,
University of Oviedo in Spain as well as professional meetings in
South America, Australia, Germany, and the U.S. She has been
awarded Young Scholar by the Stanford University Hoover Institution
Koret K-12 Task Force. She has been the recipient of numerous
awards, fellowships, grants, including the AERA-NSF-IES grant, NIMH
fellowship for prevention, Center for Urban Educational Research
and Development (CUERD) fellowship, Chancellor’s Service Award,
Teaching Incentive Award, and Early Outreach Award for her
dedication and service to inner city youth by the University of
Illinois. Among many published articles, she is the author of a
research monograph called Educational Productivity in South Korea
and the United States published by the International Journal of
Educational Research (IJER). She is the co-author of a booklet
called Effective Educational Practices published by UNESCO and
translated and disseminated to almost 150 countries. Dr. Paik is
the editor of Advancing Educational Productivity: Policy
Implications from National Databases. She has recently co-edited a
special IJER journal issue on family-school partnerships.
Herbert J. Walberg was on the faculty of Harvard University and is
now Emeritus University Scholar and Research Professor of Education
and Psychology at theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago. Dr Walberg
is also Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Stanford University and a
Principal Investigator at the U.S Department of Education-sponsored
Center for Educational Innovation and Improvement and the U.S.
Institute of Education-sponsored National Research and Development
Center on School Choice, Competition, and Achievement. An editor or
author of more than 50 books, he has contributed more than 300
papers to peer-reviewed psychology and education journals, and he
has written extensively for educators and policy makers. Dr.
Walberg currently edits a series of booklets on effective education
practices for the International Academy of Education that the
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Educational
Organization distributes in hard copy in more than 150 countries
and on the Internet for down loading and re-publication. He is a
fellow of the American Psychological Association, the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, the International
Academy of Education, and the Royal Statistical Society. In 2004,
the U.S. Senate confirmed his presidential appointment to the
National Board for Education Sciences, which will provide guidance
and oversight for federal research on education.
From the reviews: "This volume is an important and impressive
collection of scholarship that addresses one of the more
intractable education problems of our times--ensuring that ALL
children receive a quality education."
-- Gloria Ladson-Billings, Kellner Family Professor in Urban
Education, University of Wisconsin at Madison, and 2005-2006
President of AERA "A major contribution to the field, the book
provides important insights into the schooling experiences of
Latino, Black, and Asian Americans and offers implications for
improving educational outcomes and well-being for ethnic minority
groups. The in-depth analyses provided by the chapter authors
should be of substantial appeal to a wide audience because of its
interdisciplinary approach and orientation to theory, research, and
practice."
--Stanley Sue, Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Asian
American Studies, University of California at Davis "In considering
the broad problems and in recommending solutions, the book provides
breadth, concision, and unique organization… The ideas and
recommendations in this book will certainly contribute to the
national debate concerning how we face the challenge to help all
our children learn well."
--Edmund W. Gordon, John M. Musser Professor of Psychology at
Yale University, Richard March Hoe Professor of Education and
Psychology at Teachers College, Columbia University "This volume
addresses the most important issue in contemporary education:
understanding diversity while making it a pedagogical asset.
Written by prominent scholars, the chapters feature incisive,
interdisciplinary analyses of the social and historical situation
of the groups and draw implications for schools, homes, and
neighborhoods as environments for learning and development. The
book is not only a wonderful read, but also a superb addition to
the literature and our common knowledge about these vital
issues."
--Luis C. Moll, Professor andAssociate Dean, College of Education,
University of Arizona "The challenge undertaken in this book is to
understand the similarities and differences across ethnic and
racial groups. … For a reader unfamiliar with specific minority
populations, this book will identify and explain many of the
complex challenges facing minority families and students that can
interfere with students’ achievement." (Jennifer B. Unger,
PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 52 (47), 2007) "The purpose of the conference
and the subsequent book was to unite interdisciplinary scholars,
practitioners, and policy makers in understanding the achievement
gap for each of the three largest minority groups in the United
States from multiple perspectives and varied theoretical
foundations. … The primary target audience of the book is
researchers, educators and those who influence policy who have an
interest in narrowing the achievement gap for Latino, Black, and
Asian minority students." (Troy E. Beckert, Journal of Youth and
Adolescence, Vol. 37, 2008)
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