Empowering minority students: An analysis of the bilingual education debate

  • Jim Cummins Ontario
Publication date
January 1989
Publisher
Universidad Autonoma de Baja California
Journal
0187-6961

Abstract

This paper argues that the nature of the bilingual education debate, represents a drama of societal self-definition. On one hand the commitment to preserve traditional power structures, and on the other, the desire to live up to theideals upon which the U.S.was founded. The latter implies the creation of a society where equality, freedom and justice represent more than just empty rhetoric. In order to build his case, the author examines the historical context of minority education in the U.S. and the surface text of the arguments both for and against the effectiveness of bilingual education. He concludes that the fundamental causes of minority students' school failure are rooted in socio historical processes of minority group disempowerment...

Extracted data

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