Bridging Multiple Worlds Cultures, Identities, and Pathways to College

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2011-04-27
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

In every cultural group and in regions worldwide, education is strongly linked to children and adolescents'' life opportunities and choices. Many societies embrace the ideals that their children will have equal access to education, and can advance through their merit. However, in many nations, as children move through primary and secondary school towards higher education, the number of immigrant, minority, and low-income youth who finish secondary school and attend college shrinks, signifying a global dilemma. Drawing on theories and research from across the social sciences,Bridging Multiple Worldsinvites readers to compare core viewpoints and ask their own questions about the roots of and remedies for this academic pipeline problem. Considering research, practice, and policies on opening pathways and pipelines, this book provides new quantitative and qualitative evidence to introduce a theory on how youth draw on their cultural worlds to navigate their pathways to college. Chapters address cultural and developmental issues involving academic and cultural identities, and how communities define success for youth. Tools for advancing research with culturally diverse students are also provided. The result is a must-have volume for researchers, educators, policymakers, and students, brimming with fresh and creative syntheses of theory, research, and policy. "A theoretically rich examination of the development of identity and educational pathways for ethnically diverse youth in American society. This is a book to be savored for its unique perspective on one of the great challenges of our times-finding ways to successfully integrate diverse youth into an increasingly unforgiving educational and social structure."--Patricia G#xE1;ndara, Ph.D., Professor of Education, UCLA "Bridging Multiple Worldsis a magnificent book! Its conceptual location on the nexus of research, practice, and policy makes the volume extremely important. Cooper deftly embraces all perspectives, speaks effectively to all, and uses the synergies to great effect. She demonstrates that approaching the work with an expectation for success is both highly engaging for all involved, and increases the likelihood that solutions will be found for inevitable challenges - through effective design and implementation. Cooper has much to teach us, and has provided a clear and comprehensive guide for pursuing effective work to help all students obtain high achievement and college degrees."--Anne C. Petersen, Ph.D., Research Professor, University of Michigan, CHGD Founder and President, Global Philanthropy Alliance "This volume represents a significant advance to our understanding of the deep socialization and cross-institutional processes that underlie higher education access among members of communities underserved by formal education systems. Its most important contribution is its theory-based overview of concrete collaborative programs and strategies attuned to the unique cultural, linguistic, and social values of participants from diverse backgrounds and life circumstances."--Richard Dur#xE1;n, Ph.D., Gevirtz Graduate School of Education, University of California, Santa Barbara "As the world becomes global and borders easier to cross, issues of migration, minorities and cultural diversity become more relevant. Catherine Cooper and her colleagues developed a dialogue across theory, research, and community action and constructed tools for helping minority adolescents take their place on the academic pathway. Of value to psychologists, educationalists, community workers, policy makers, or anyone concerned with the future of education, this book offers strategies for building bridges of understanding across cultures to provide equal educational opportunities for all."--Rachel Seginer, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of Human Development and Education, University of Haifa, Israel "This is a superb book. Cooper deconstructs the concept of ''disadvantage'' - the emphasis falls on culture and identities instead of deficits and poor academic skills alone. Yielded is a rich review of studies - and refreshing alternatives to many standard assumptions. These approaches and concepts are relevant to other social groups and other ''pipeline'' progressions, making the book a richly rewarding source for several audiences."--Professor Jacqueline Goodnow, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor, Macquarie University

Author Biography


Catherine R. Cooper, Ph.D. is Professor of Psychology and Founding Director of the Doctoral Program in Developmental Psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is Director of the Bridging Multiple Worlds Alliance, a growing network of researchers, educators, and policymakers focused on understanding how culturally diverse youth build pathways through school and on finding approaches to foster their success.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. xi
Contributorsp. xiii
Introduction
The Academic Pipeline Problem: A Local, National, and Global Dilemmap. 5
Defining Culturesp. 7
Capital, Alienation, and Challengep. 9
Five Core Questionsp. 10
Overview of Bookp. 13
Asking Better Questions: Challenges and Useful Strategiesp. 15
Unpackaging Demographic Categoriesp. 16
Beyond Deficit Models and Model Minorities: Parallel Designsp. 21
From ôGiving Science Awayö to Cultural Research Partnershipsp. 26
Next Stepsp. 27
Five Questions
Autonomy or Connections? Identities as Intergenerational Projectsp. 33
Erikson: Identity as a Lifespan and Intergenerational Projectp. 34
The Role of Culture in Families' Values and Communication about Identityp. 41
Opportunities and Constraints in Identity Developmentp. 45
Individual Variationsp. 46
Next Steps and Implications for the Pipeline Problemp. 46
Capital, Alienation, or Challenge? What Matters for Pathways to Collegep. 49
Math and Language Pathways through Schoolp. 49
African American and Latino Youth in University Bridging Programsp. 51
Aligning Findings with the Capital, Alienation, and Challenge Modelsp. 56
Conclusions and Next Stepsp. 60
Brokers and Gatekeepers: How Can Youth Bridge Their Cultural Worlds?p. 63
Epstein's Theory of Overlapping Spheres of Influencep. 64
Sociocultural Theoriesp. 65
Opening the Academic Pipeline across Cultural Communities, Regions, and Social Classp. 67
Aspirations and Expectations for School, Careers, and the Good Path of Lifep. 69
Bridging Worlds of Families, Peers, Schools, and Communitiesp. 72
Next Stepsp. 78
From Fragile Bridges to Alliances: Opening Institutional Opportunitiesp. 80
Connecting Worlds along Pathways to Collegep. 80
Integrating Bridges into P-20 Alliancesp. 87
Building a Common Languagep. 89
Next Steps for Research, Policy, and Practicep. 95
Soledad's Dream: How Immigrant Youth and a Partnership Build Pathways to Collegep. 98
How Do Multicultural Communities Define Success for their Youth and for Themselves?p. 100
A Program and a Partnershipp. 100
Next Steps for Multicultural Communitiesp. 109
Generalizing Findings: How Typical?p. 111
Looking Ahead
Implications and Future Directionsp. 115
What Have We Learned about the Five Core Questions?p. 116
Advancing Cycles of Research, Practice, and Policyp. 122
Promising Strategies: Toward a Common Languagep. 124
Tools for Advancing Research, Practice, and Policyp. 127
Five Dimensions: Sample Questions, Coding, and Research Findingsp. 128
Bridging Resources and Challenges across Worldsp. 136
Cultural Research Partnerships from Childhood to Collegep. 140
Conclusionsp. 141
Demographic Portraits: Comparing Home Languages of Language Learners across Schoolsp. 142
Referencesp. 143
Indexp. 177
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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