Aboriginal Student Engagement and Achievement

Educational Practices and Cultural Sustainability

By Lorenzo Cherubini
Categories: Indigenous Studies, Education, Indigenous Education
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774826556, 212 pages, November 2014
Paperback : 9780774826563, 212 pages, May 2015
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774826570, 212 pages, November 2014
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774826587, 212 pages, November 2014
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774829977, 212 pages, November 2014

Table of contents

Foreword / Lyn Trudeau

Introduction

Part 1: Background

1 Evoking the Past, Framing the Future

2 Setting the Story

Part 2: From Theory to Practice

3 The Conversations

4 Subplots

5 Climax: Learning from the Stories

Appendices

Works Cited; Index

Culturally relevant programs hold the secrets to Aboriginal student engagement and achievement in Canada’s public schools.

Description

Aboriginal people want an education that reflects their cultural values and linguistic heritages, an education that will foster their children’s engagement and identity and not marginalize them as learners. This book turns the spotlight on a rare success story – one Ontario high school’s attempt to recognize Aboriginal students’ cultural and academic needs while helping them build relationships with non-Aboriginal students. Aboriginal students constitute one of the fastest-growing groups in public schools. This timely study not only reveals how the current system is failing Indigenous students – it offers recommendations for enhancing their achievement levels in Canada and abroad.

Reviews

Importantly, [this] book not only tells a story of Aboriginal students in public education systems but also situates the narrative within a broader socio-historical context that serves to provide the reader with significant insights into how the education system in Canada has failed Aboriginal youth ... Cherubini’s book offers a significant contribution to the landscape of Aboriginal education, opportunities to make further advances in this field, and expands on specific areas related to learning in order to provide increased clarity into the nature of how Aboriginal students learn most effectively.

- Gabrielle Lindstrom