Description

Book Synopsis

This unique volume brings together findings from six separate but interconnected studies, carried out over seven years in the same small bilingual elementary school. During a period of rapid gentrification in Austin, Texas, Hillside Elementary transformed from a predominantly Latinx, under-resourced and under-enrolled neighborhood school with a transitional bilingual program to a two-way dual language bilingual education (TWBE) school with a waiting list of middle-class families from across the school district. Chapter authors entered the context as researchers at various points along the timeline, with varied theoretical lenses, research questions, and methodological approaches. Most authors have also been parents or teachers at the school, and all were deeply invested in the school community and the education of bilingual students. They come together to argue that in order for a TWBE school to serve marginalized bilingual and BIPOC children and families, it must work collectively toward critical consciousness. Educators, parents, and students must learn to center the cultural, linguistic and racial/ethnic identities of marginalized families, and engage in ongoing dialogue at every level. The culminating product is a theme with variations: one context, one phenomenon, multiple varied positionalities and perspectives.



Trade Review

This book is essential reading for educators, parents, and policy makers interested in establishing Dual Language Bilingual Education programs. Focusing on a single school viewed over a seven-year period, the chapters describe the very serious social justice challenges surrounding gentrification and tell a compelling story about the ways that sincere efforts to build an inclusive school can still result in re-centering whiteness and marginalizing low-income children and their families.

-- Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University

Table of Contents

Chapter 1Hillside Elementary, Our Research Collaborative, Gentrification, and TWBE in Texas

Chapter 2Espacios de confianza: Affectively and Systemically Resisting Color-blind Ideologies in TWBE Home-school Planning

Chapter 3“The Dual Language Program Changes Everything”: The First Year of TWBE at Hillside and the (Re)negotiation of a School’s Identity

Chapter 4“I feel it’s not about ability, it’s about power.” Bilingual Teachers’ Interpretation of a Gentrifying Two-way Immersion Program

Chapter 5“Tenemos que seguir nuestra cultura”: Whiteness as Property at Hillside Elementary and Sam Houston Middle Schools

Chapter 6Spaces of Resistance, Hope, and Justice: Centering the Foundational Goal of Critical Consciousness at Hillside

Chapter 7From Tamales and Mole to Pizza and Pasta: Where Went the Neighborhood, So Goes the School

Chapter 8¡Adelante!

Gentrification and Bilingual Education: A Texas

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    £69.30

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    A Hardback by Deborah K. Palmer, Suzanne García-Mateus, Melissa Adams-Corral

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      View other formats and editions of Gentrification and Bilingual Education: A Texas by Deborah K. Palmer

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 15/12/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793653024, 978-1793653024
      ISBN10: 179365302X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This unique volume brings together findings from six separate but interconnected studies, carried out over seven years in the same small bilingual elementary school. During a period of rapid gentrification in Austin, Texas, Hillside Elementary transformed from a predominantly Latinx, under-resourced and under-enrolled neighborhood school with a transitional bilingual program to a two-way dual language bilingual education (TWBE) school with a waiting list of middle-class families from across the school district. Chapter authors entered the context as researchers at various points along the timeline, with varied theoretical lenses, research questions, and methodological approaches. Most authors have also been parents or teachers at the school, and all were deeply invested in the school community and the education of bilingual students. They come together to argue that in order for a TWBE school to serve marginalized bilingual and BIPOC children and families, it must work collectively toward critical consciousness. Educators, parents, and students must learn to center the cultural, linguistic and racial/ethnic identities of marginalized families, and engage in ongoing dialogue at every level. The culminating product is a theme with variations: one context, one phenomenon, multiple varied positionalities and perspectives.



      Trade Review

      This book is essential reading for educators, parents, and policy makers interested in establishing Dual Language Bilingual Education programs. Focusing on a single school viewed over a seven-year period, the chapters describe the very serious social justice challenges surrounding gentrification and tell a compelling story about the ways that sincere efforts to build an inclusive school can still result in re-centering whiteness and marginalizing low-income children and their families.

      -- Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1Hillside Elementary, Our Research Collaborative, Gentrification, and TWBE in Texas

      Chapter 2Espacios de confianza: Affectively and Systemically Resisting Color-blind Ideologies in TWBE Home-school Planning

      Chapter 3“The Dual Language Program Changes Everything”: The First Year of TWBE at Hillside and the (Re)negotiation of a School’s Identity

      Chapter 4“I feel it’s not about ability, it’s about power.” Bilingual Teachers’ Interpretation of a Gentrifying Two-way Immersion Program

      Chapter 5“Tenemos que seguir nuestra cultura”: Whiteness as Property at Hillside Elementary and Sam Houston Middle Schools

      Chapter 6Spaces of Resistance, Hope, and Justice: Centering the Foundational Goal of Critical Consciousness at Hillside

      Chapter 7From Tamales and Mole to Pizza and Pasta: Where Went the Neighborhood, So Goes the School

      Chapter 8¡Adelante!

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