Education is expected to assist students in the development of their personal identities and the achievement of social and economic success. Yet the aspirations of Aboriginal students have too often been thwarted by the very structures that are supposed to help them. Combining a research study,
an extensive review of literature, and an analysis of current trends, Schissel and Wotherspoon detail the harm done to Aboriginal children and their families--not only in the past, when residential schools explicitly set out to eliminate Aboriginal identities, but also in more recent years, when
educational systems designed for the mainstream have relegated First Nations students to the sidelines. The authors find hope for the future in four experimental programs from Saskatchewan, in which severely stressed Aboriginal youth have found self-esteem in educational settings that take into
account traditional culture and spiritual teachings, as well as academic achievement. Interviews with Aboriginal students provide an additional depth to the authors' findings.
Acknowledgements
Preface
1. Educational Dreams and Disappointments
2. Aboriginal Education in Canada: Issues and Theories
3. The Legacy of Residential Schools
4. The Voices of Students of Aboriginal Ancestry
5. Determinants of Successful Schooling
6. Education,
Justice, and Community: A Paradigm for Enfranchising Children and Youth
Appendix A: Protocol and Researcher Experiences and Reflections
Appendix B: Interview Guide
Web Sites
Bibliography
Index
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
Bernard Schissel has been a professor at the University of Saskatchewan since 1989. He is the co-author of Social Control in Canada with Linda Mahood (OUP Canada, 1996). He is a contributor to one of the chapters in Youth Crime: Varieties, Theories, and Prevention, edited by Russell Smandych,
and another chapter in Youth Justice: History, Legislation, and Reform (both Harcourt, 2001), also edited by Smandych. He has also contributed to books by Sage, Copp-Clarke, and Fernwood.
Terry Wotherspoon has been head and professor of the sociology department at the U of S for many
years. Dr. Wotherspoon has much publishing experience. He wrote The Sociology of Education in Canada (OUP Canada, 1998), and co-authored First Nations (Nelson, 1993) with Vic Satzewich. He has contributed to manu books including Bolaria's Social Issues and Contradictions, 3e (Harcourt, 2001).
Making Sense in the Social Sciences - Margot Northey, Lorne Tepperman and Patrizia Albanese