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Gellman, Mneesha – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2019
This article critically examines bilingual, intercultural education policies and practices in El Salvador and Mexico. In the context of legacies of assimilation and neoliberal homogenization, certain kinds of citizenship become prioritized over others. This is visible where performances of local identity clash with state mandates about educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Educational Policy
Nahmad, Salomon – Cultural Survival Quarterly, 1998
Historically, Mexican education for indigenous children has reinforced linguistic ethnocide and assimilation in inefficient schools of low educational quality. Assimilationist policies generated interethnic, political, and economic conflicts. Recent constitutional changes resulted in minimal changes nationally, but a recent Oaxacan law protects…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Culture Conflict
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Rippberger, Susan J. – Comparative Education Review, 1993
Since the 1950s, arguments for bilingual education in the United States and Mexico have shifted from functionalist interest in modernization to critical demand for equity, then to interpretist recognition of multiple realities. Although minority groups are organizing to influence educational policy, entrenched dominant groups are unlikely to…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Cultural Pluralism
Charles, Roger; And Others – 1981
Written as a reference for students, teachers, educationists, lawyers, and researchers, the book provides information on the education of indigenous peoples and a variety of other interests, such as characteristics of individual countries, history of native peoples, country's definition of indigenous people, statistics on educational performance,…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Demography, Developed Nations, Developing Nations
Southwest Educational Development Lab., Austin, TX. – 1995
This proceedings, in English and Spanish, describes the first U.S./Mexico Curriculum Symposium, held in Austin, Texas, in November 1994. The symposium grew out of an ongoing exchange between educators in the Republic of Mexico and the United States and was attended by over 200 teachers, administrators, staff from state and regional education…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Bilingualism, Cooperative Programs
Vaughan, Mary Kay – 1997
In the 1930s, Mexican rural schools became arenas for cultural politics--the process of articulating and disputing definitions of culture, from national identity to the broader sense of social behavior and meaning. Created in 1921, the Secretaria de Educacion Publica (SEP) set up federal rural schools to nationalize and modernize rural peasants.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Educational History, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education