Empowering Minority Students: A Framework for Intervention
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- Published by Harvard Education Publishing Group in Harvard Educational Review
- Vol. 56 (1) , 18-37
- https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.56.1.b327234461607787
Abstract
Jim Cummins presents a theoretical framework for analyzing minority students' school failure and the relative lack of success of previous attempts at educational reform, such as compensatory education and bilingual education. The author suggests that these attempts have been unsuccessful because they have not altered significantly the relationships between educators and minority students and between schools and minority communities. He offers ways in which educators can change these relationships, thereby promoting the empowerment of students which can lead them to succeed in school.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Incidence of Exceptionality Among Hispanics: Implications for Manpower PlanningNABE Journal, 1983
- COLLABORATION BETWEEN TEACHERS AND PARENTS IN ASSISTING CHILDREN'S READINGBritish Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
- Early Identification of Learning Disabilities: Facts and FallaciesThe Elementary School Journal, 1980
- Linguistic Interdependence and the Educational Development of Bilingual ChildrenReview of Educational Research, 1979
- Research Evidence for the Effectiveness of Bilingual EducationNABE Journal, 1978
- The Learning-Disabilities Test Battery: Empirical and Social IssuesHarvard Educational Review, 1978
- Learning about Psycholinguistic Processes by Analyzing Oral ReadingHarvard Educational Review, 1977