![]() Beyond Access: Methods and Models for Increasing Retention and Learning Success Among Minority Students: New Directions for Community Colleges, No. 112
ISBN: 978-0-7879-5429-1
Paperback
120 pages
February 2001, Jossey-Bass
US $29.00
This price is valid for United States. Change location to view local pricing and availability. |
Instructors may request an evaluation copy for this title.
|
This issue presents practical models, alternative approaches and new strategies for creating effective cross-cultural courses that foster higher retention and learning success for minority students. Arguing that minority students represent various cultures and socioeconomic backgrounds, the authors discuss a wide range of issues for educators in this field, including culturally specific learning styles, work-based mentoring programs, and the role of the non-minority instructor in a minority environment. Articles critically examine traditional methods in admissions assessments, placement measures, and learning evaluation that are failing to address cultural diversity, and offer alternatives, such as a theoretical model for measuring student learning style incorporating components of motivation and engagement for inclusion with the traditional cognitive perspective. They also present a case study of one campus's efforts to create a more inclusive climate. With demographic projections indicating dramatic increases in minority student population in the following decades, the authors assert that educational programs must now develop a broader curricula that includes multicultural and multi-linguistic information. In this issue, they have provided a valuable resource for institutions meeting that challenge.
This is the 112th issue of the Jossey-Bass series New Directions for Community Colleges.

