ABSTRACT

In Minority Students in East Asia: Government Policies, School Practices and Teacher Responses authors discuss their research on minority students’ schooling (elementary to higher education) in Mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Minority students’ educational issues are often neglected in literature and in practice; social and educational conditions that have resulted from globalization – in particular issues pertaining to minority groups’ education, language and other human rights – receive little attention. In addition, many areas of East Asia have viewed themselves as single-ethnicity countries and have not articulated strong agendas around minority rights. The purpose of this book is to highlight key educational issues for specific minority populations in East Asia. Themes addressed include government policies related to minorities; equity issues in the education of minorities; school practices and teacher perspectives on minorities; identity construction in terms of language and culture; national versus ethnic identity; teacher education issues; and parental concerns. The authors also discuss new theoretical orientations to understanding minority educational issues. A particular strength of this book is the use of multicultural education theories to both articulate concerns related to the education of minority students and to provide solutions to these concerns.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Minority Students in East Asia

part |89 pages

Minority Students in Mainland China

chapter |17 pages

Language, Culture, and Identity

Experiences of Hui Students in Eastern China

chapter |17 pages

Multiculturalism in China

Conflicting Discourses in Universities

chapter |22 pages

School Life and Ethnic Identity

A Case of Tibetan Student Narrative

part |90 pages

Minority Students in Hong Kong

chapter |18 pages

Critical Perspective on New Arrival Children from Mainland China in Hong Kong

Government Policies, School Practices, and Teacher Responses

chapter |14 pages

Building a Culturally Responsive School

Cross-Cultural Experiences of Ethnic Minority Students in Hong Kong Schools

chapter |19 pages

The “Long March” toward Multiculturalism in Hong Kong

Supporting Ethnic Minority Students in a Confucian State 1

chapter |19 pages

Cross-Boundary Students in Hong Kong Schools

Education Provisions and School Experiences

part |64 pages

Minority Students in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan

chapter |22 pages

Language Learning Experiences of International Students in Japan

Facilitating Access to Communities of Practice

chapter |19 pages

From Assimilation to the Assertion of Subjectivity

Critiques of Indigenous Educational Policies in Taiwan

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

Where Does Multicultural Education in Asian Countries Lead?