Description
Book SynopsisIlluminating issues of diversity at the intersection of rural education and multilingual learners (ML) in the United States, this edited volume brings forth new research that captures the importance of place and rurality in the work of educators who serve multilingual learners and their families. The six chapters in this book demonstrate that education for teachers, leaders and staff, professional development programs, and government-funded projects aimed to improve rural education need to begin with three interrelated, multifaceted principles. The first principle is the need to center place and rurality as essential factors that affect education for all educators, students, and families who live, work, and attend schools in rural communities. Second, educators must humanize multilingual students, their families, and their cultures in ways that go beyond merely acknowledging their presence – they must deeply see and understand the lives and (hi)stories of the multilingual students and families that they serve in their rural schools. Finally, the third principle involves identifying multilingual resources for ML students and their families. Given the persistent inequities in access to resources and opportunities that rural ML students and families face, this last principle requires careful planning, networking, and advocating in ways that can truly effectuate change. Contributors are: Jioanna Carjuzaa, Maria R. Coady, Paula Golombek, Shuzhan Li, Kristin Kline Liu, Nidza V. Marichal, Charity Funfe Tatah Mentan, Kym O’Donnell, Stephanie Oudghiri, Darrell Peterson, Sonja Phillips, Jenelle Reeves and Yi-Chen Wu.
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Notes on Contributors 1 Introduction Maria R. Coady, Paula Golombek and Nidza V. Marichal 2 Teacher Knowledge and Secondary English Learners in Rural Florida: Reimagining Place-Based Education through Relationship Building Nidza V. Marichal 3 A Teacher’s Emotional Journey in Rural Florida: From Insider to Outsider Shuzhan Li 4 Bilingual Paraeducators’ Navigation of Narrow Identity Spaces in a Rural Elementary School Jenelle Reeves 5 Centering the Voices of Rural Immigrant Paraeducators Stephanie Oudghiri 6 Preparing Regular Classroom Teachers to Work with Frequently Invisible, Woefully Misunderstood American Indian English Language Learners Jioanna Carjuzaa 7 Where Do I Go? What do I do? Training Educators of Rural English Learners to Provide Accessible Instruction and Assessment Kristin Kline Liu, Sonja Phillips, Yi-Chen Wu, Darrell Peterson, Charity Funfe Tatah Mentan, and Kym O’Donnell 8 Conclusion Maria R. Coady, Paula Golombek and Nidza V. Marichal Index