Education in Albuquerque

Education in Albuquerque

Author: Ann Piper,

Publisher: Arcadia Publishing

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 1467131032

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A mix of cultures unique to any space in North America funneled into the Albuquerque, New Mexico, area after Spanish invaders stumbled in through the south in 1506. For centuries, indigenous Americans had established ways of knowing and transmitting learning to their young, but colliding old and new cultures left the areas learning communities irrevocably changed. Subsequently, other native tribes and more European, South American, and Asian cultures proudly ported their perceived best practices concerning educating youth into the area. In 1880, the railroad, bolstered by powerful Anglo economic forces, blasted into Albuquerque, carrying new cultures clinging to the railcars: Greeks, Italians, Germans, Jews of many heritages, English, Easterners, Southerners, a host of cowboys, farmers, merchants, and moreall shadowed by motivated politicians. The founding, unfolding, and evolution of educational systems in Albuquerque weaves a crazy-quilt story regarding public, private, and parochial schoolingas well as regrettably ill-founded systems that wronged natives.--Amazon.com.


Every Child

Every Child

Author: Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce. Economic Development and Education Reform Task Force

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 42

ISBN-13:

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Educational Reform in New Mexico

Educational Reform in New Mexico

Author: David L. Bachelor

Publisher:

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13:

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Providing quality education for all children is a challenge in multicultural societies such as the United States. Historically, individual educators and theorists have proposed a variety of approaches to educating children whose native language is not English. In the 1930s Loyd Tireman organized two experiments in cross-cultural education in New Mexico. These experiments were remarkably successful and anticipated contemporary trends, yet they remained unacknowledged and, until now, unstudied. Bachelor makes Tireman's insights available to modern teachers.Tireman saw the necessity of tailoring education to the child rather than fitting the child into a standardized curriculum. His demonstration school at San Jos near Albuquerque reversed low reading comprehension scores and became an important resource for rural teachers. The school at Namb became a center of village life as parents were drawn into efforts to make the schoolroom relevant to children's lives.Bachelor offers a balanced assessment of Tireman's efforts and considers his career in relation to the nature of educational reform.