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ISBN: 0674505867
October 1996
Kwanzaa
Review:
Paley, a white kindergarten teacher at the Univ. of Chicago Laboratory
Schools, interviewed parents of black pupils, adult graduates of integrated
schools, African American teachers, a Tlingit Indian Head Start teacher in
Alaska and students of various racial and ethnic backgrounds. To her
surprise, many of the black parents and teachers were deeply skeptical of
the integrated classroom, citing subtle but pervasive racism, and said they
favored all-black schools as the best environment to build their children's
self-esteem and sense of identity. Recording her dialogues and encounters at
conferences and schools around the country, Paley (You Can't Say You Can't
Play) supports the multicultural classroom as a forum where teachers can
help children recognize and accept individual differences. She also relates
here her fictional stories featuring a runaway slave, Kwanzaa (whose name
she took from the African American holiday), which she uses to teach about
racism in this sensitive report.
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