Workshop: Teaching Chicano/ Latino History in Grades 8-12. Curriculum ideas for teaching about César Chávez,
Dolores Huerta, Civil Rights Movement, and economic justice. With Duane Campbell, Director of the
Education and Democracy Institute., Sacramento. Dolores Delgado Campbell. Professor. American River College.
Presented as a
part of the annual conference of The
Bilingual Multicultural Education Department (BMED) Sat . Nov. 5, 2011.
10;35 Am. In the University Union, at Sacramento State.
California has the
largest population of any state, with more than 6,252,000 students in
school in 2008. California students make up more than 11
percent of the United States total. California, along with some 16 other
states, adopts textbooks for the entire state instead of district by district
purchasing. This makes the California adoption the largest single
textbook sale in the nation.
California has failed to revise its k-12 history curriculum since
1987. Since 2008, the failure was
caused by the way the legislature and the governor responded to the state’s budget crisis.
When the 48.72 % of students
who are Latino , and the 11.5 % who are Asian do not see themselves as part of
history, for many their sense of self is
marginalized. Marginalization negatively impacts their
connections with school and their success at school. It contributes
to an over 50% drop out rate for Latinos and some Asian students. An
accurate history would provide some students with a a
sense of self, of direction, of purpose. History and social
science classes should help young people acquire and learn to
use the skills, knowledge, and attitudes that will prepare them to be competent
and responsible citizens throughout their lives. Instead, the
current history textbooks tell a fairy tale of what happened here in the
Southwest.
The presentation will provide
teachers with ways to use the Chicano/ Mexican American Digital History
materials of history in the Sacramento region. The materials were created by local teachers and historians
to provide materials for students to make up for the failure of California to
update its history curriculum
since 1987.
Workshop: Curriculum ideas for teaching about César Chávez,
Dolores Huerta, Civil Rights Movement, and economic justice. Use of Chicano
Digital History Project .
https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/chicano-mexican-american-digital-history-project
The Institute for Democracy and Education is an
independent, non partisan research and advocacy organization
established in Sacramento in 2009 to promote debate on the important issues of
democracy, education and schools. Dr. Campbell is a
professor emeritus of Bilingual Education at CSU-Sacramento.
For more information on the conference , please
contact Dr. Maggie Beddow,
Conference Chair at beddow@csus.edu or the College of Education BMED
office: (916) 278-5942.
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