La Clase Mágica

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A01=Olga A. Vasquez
assistant
Author_Olga A. Vasquez
beach
bilingual education research
cards
Category=CFDM
Category=JNSV
community
community engagement strategies
Cross-system Collaboration
DE Los
Distributive Literacy Consortium
eden
Eden Gardens
educational equity initiatives
Electronic Entity
Elementary School Aged Children
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
gardens
IBM Computer
Ice Ice Baby
La Clase
La Quebrada
Long Term Participants
Low IQ Score
mexicano
Mexicano Community
Michigan State University
minority language acquisition
Multiple Knowledge Sources
participatory action research
sociocultural learning theory
solana
Solana Beach
Spanish English Bilingual Children
Spanish Language
Specific Educational Resources
task
Task Cards
UC System
UCSD Student
Undergraduate Students
university community partnership models
wizard
Wizard Assistants
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805840247
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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La Clase Mágica: Imagining Optimal Possibilities in a Bilingual Community of Learners vividly captures the social and intellectual developments and the promises of an ongoing after-school project called La Clase Mágica. It is a blow-by-blow description of the early transformations of a project that began as an educational activity and slowly but deliberately turned into a social action project whose aim was to serve those with low economic and political means and little access to educational resources. This multivocal account details research in action for effectively serving Spanish-English bilingual speakers from a Mexican origin community, as well as--on a broader level--the diverse populations that increasingly characterize American society today. The focus is on the early foundational work of the project between 1989-1996, though attention is also given to the national and international recognition the project has subsequently received, the college-going patterns of its long-term participants, and the transplantation of the project to other cultural communities.

The book speaks out from the "zones of contact" between the university and a language minority community about new ways to extend and intersect theory and practice in many areas of the educational enterprise. Contact is defined not only in the physical sense of face-to-face interaction but also as symbolic interaction between languages, cultures, histories, and epistemologies. Thus, Vásquez speaks of optimal possibilities situated in the middle grounds, or more technically speaking, in the borders between Spanish and English, Mexican and mainstream culture, minority and majority designations, and between school and community contexts where contact is made and new arrangements are imagined.

This account uses the reflections of participants at times to take readers from the scientific to the everyday, to make real and concrete the theoretical conceptualizations that box in human behavior. In this way, it defines the theories, methods, and philosophies for linking multiple disciplines, institutions, and participant groups into a concerted effort with potential to reframe the educational opportunities of under-served populations. A close look is provided into the intricacies and the fundamental principles for building and sustaining effective learning environments and institutional relations necessary for enhancing the potential of learners of all ages. In the process, the book also suggests ways in which community members and institutional agents can play an active and integral role in creating learning opportunities that serve both constituencies. Educators and policymakers will find the systems approach for pursuing parent and community involvement in the educational enterprise useful. In sum, the book offers researchers, practitioners, and policymakers much needed guidance, insight, and perhaps inspiration for rethinking educational goals and objectives.

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