ABSTRACT

International Perspectives on Intercultural Education offers a comprehensive analysis of intercultural education activity as it is practiced in the countries of Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, England, South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Chapters by key scholars and practitioners from these nations inform the reader of current educational practice related to diversity. Each author, responding to a common series of guiding questions, presents:
*a brief description of the national educational system in her or his country;
*descriptive data on demographics in these countries, including data on various subgroups and subcultures and their experiences with the mainstream educational system;
* a discussion of the perceived obstacles to addressing intercultural issues in schools and solutions to overcoming these obstacles; and
*a comprehensive analysis of intercultural information on how teacher preparation institutions address intercultural education at the present time.
An overall concern of each chapter author is how intercultural approaches can be employed to solve the difficulties faced by both individuals and schools while maintaining the cultural integrity of the child.

chapter 4|20 pages

Interculturalism in Education

A Malaysian Perspective

chapter 5|30 pages

Intercultural Education

Approaches in the Netherlands

chapter 9|24 pages

Multiculturalism in the Context of Africa

The Case of Nigeria

chapter 10|28 pages

Breaking Out of a Separatist Paradigm

Intercultural Education in South Africa

chapter 11|21 pages

Ghana

Education in a Multicultural Context

chapter 13|19 pages

Intercultural Education in Canada

Glimpses from the Past, Hopes for the Future

chapter 14|32 pages

Intercultural Education

The Case of Mexico

chapter 15|18 pages

Intercultural Education from an International Perspective

Commonalities and Future Prospects