This volume examines how the public and private domains in school education in India are informed and mediated by current market realities. It moves beyond the simplistic dichotomy of pro-state vs pro-market factors that define most current debates in the formulations of educational reform agendas t
American Indian Educators in Reservation Schools
โ Scribed by Terry Huffman
- Publisher
- University of Nevada Press
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 193
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Like the figures in the ancient oral literature of Native Americans, children who lived through the American Indian boarding school experience became heroes, bravely facing a monster not of their own making. Sometimes the monster swallowed them up. More often, though, the children fought the monster
<p><br>In the late 1960s, Indian families in Minneapolis and St. Paul were under siege. Clyde Bellecourt remembers, โWe were losing our children during this time; juvenile courts were sweeping our children up, and they were fostering them out, and sometimes whole families were being broken up.โ In 1
<p>Immigrants from China started settling in Calcutta, the British capital of colonial India, from the late eighteenth century. Initially, the immigrant community comprised of male workers, many of whom sojourned between China and India. Only in the early twentieth century was there a large influx o
While white residents of antebellum Boston and New Haven forcefully opposed the education of black residents, their counterparts in slaveholding Baltimore did little to resist the establishment of African American schools. Such discrepancies, Hilary Moss argues, suggest that white opposition to blac