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Beabout, Brian – Multicultural Education, 2007
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the district temporarily lost 100% of its students and did not reopen a single school for more than two months. As it became apparent that the district was not prepared to bring the schools back from such a devastating blow, educators began to see a silver lining in Katrina's dark clouds. State School Board…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, State Schools, Public Schools, Boards of Education
Wynne, Joan T. – Multicultural Education, 2007
Certainly, individuals in many colleges and public schools address the impact of race, class, and power on schools, yet the institutions as a whole continue, even a year after Katrina, to ignore the imperative to explicitly and consistently deal with these issues. Human justice must become an institutional mantra, not just the conversation of a…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Natural Disasters, Racial Factors, School Role
Burley, Hansel; Marbley, Aretha Faye; Bush, Lawson, V. – Multicultural Education, 2007
This article concerns the tragedy of the misuse of power and the power of imagined inferiority. African Americans must lose misconceptions about the majority, heighten understanding about being Black in America and how that makes their children vulnerable to this nation's worst, stop fighting losing battles like affirmative action, and find and…
Descriptors: African Americans, African American Community, Affirmative Action, Misconceptions
Wong, Penelope – Multicultural Education, 2007
As a teacher educator who regularly teaches a multicultural education course, the author has often employed service-learning as a pedagogical strategy in assisting preservice teachers to understand better the various multicultural topics they discuss, such as racism, heterosexism, and sexism that impact their schools. Therefore, when she was…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Education Courses, Multicultural Education, Service Learning
Moore, Alicia L. – Multicultural Education, 2007
The importance of multiculturalism in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina can be illustrated through a comparative view of the 1967 controversial, seminal, and Academy Award winning film, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner". In the film, a multicultural cast starred in a groundbreaking tale of interracial marriage--then still illegal in some United…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Social Discrimination, Cultural Pluralism, Racial Relations
Gay, Geneva – Multicultural Education, 2007
Teaching children who are victims of Katrina is not a multicultural education issue per se. However, there are some intersections between the victims of Katrina and the educational responses to them, and some of the primary constituent groups and issues that multicultural education represents and intends to serve. These are children of color and…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Student Needs, Educationally Disadvantaged, Disadvantaged Youth
Marbley, Aretha Faye – Multicultural Education, 2007
Throughout the country and especially in Texas, local communities opened their arms to hurricane Katrina evacuees. Like the federal government, emergency health and mental health entities were unprepared for the massive numbers of people needing assistance. Mental health professionals, though armed with a wealth of crisis intervention information,…
Descriptors: Crisis Intervention, Mental Health Workers, Mental Health Programs, Community Coordination