Voices from the margins : : school experiences of refugee, migrant and indigenous children / / Eva Alerby, Jill Brown.

Equitable access to education is fundamental to any concept of social justice offering as it does the means of escape from social and economic marginalisation. Despite this, in too many countries around the world groups of children are systematically denied access to education which will equip them...

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Place / Publishing House:Rotterdam ;, Taipei : : Sense Publishers,, [2008]
©2008
Year of Publication:2008
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource.
Notes:Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
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520 |a Equitable access to education is fundamental to any concept of social justice offering as it does the means of escape from social and economic marginalisation. Despite this, in too many countries around the world groups of children are systematically denied access to education which will equip them for meaningful participation in the society in which they live. Their needs are ignored and their voices are silenced. They are locked into the position of ‘marginalised other’, the perpetual stranger in society. This collection of studies by an international group of researchers provides a place for migrant, refugee and indigenous children to talk about their school experiences. Refugee children from the Sudan, Afghanistan and Somalia, indigenous children from Sweden, Australia, New Zealand and Vietnam, migrant children in Canada, Iceland and Hong Kong, urban and rural children from Zanzibar all speak out through drawings, small group and individual discussion. For some children their school experiences are positive ones in which systems and teachers work together to meet their needs. For others their experiences are of racism, isolation, inadequately equipped and poorly funded schools, unsympathetic teachers and education systems designed to cater for majority groups. Despite these differences all the children remain enthusiastic about school. They are, in the words of a boy from Afghanistan, ‘thirsty to learn’. The children and the researchers all argue for education as a means to redress, rather than perpetuate, disadvantage. A vital first step in this process is to hear what is being said by those most affected by current practices. The narratives in this text offer a chance to do just that. Cover photo: Marginalized, Gustav Alerby, Rosvik, Sweden? 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references. 
505 0 0 |t Preliminary Material /  |r Eva Alerby and Jill Brown --   |t Introduction /  |r Eva Alerby and Jill Brown --   |t What it Means to Become a Stranger /  |r Niclas Månsson --   |t A boy gives a signal with his hand … need help /  |r Jórunn Elídóttir --   |t In school you learn to get on in life /  |r Eva Alerby --   |t To become somebody you have to learn Swedish /  |r Arne Forsman --   |t Without friends I will be very lonely /  |r Pui Man Jennie Wong --   |t My first day in class I just understood ‘hello’ /  |r Lloydetta Ursula Quaicoe --   |t I’m black … apart from that I enjoy school /  |r Zane MaRhea and Bernadette Atkinson --   |t He is thirsty for knowledge /  |r Jill Brown --   |t If we had mean-as (great) teachers we’d have a mean-as (great) school /  |r Emily Nelson , Kate Christensen and Mark Cleary --   |t My teacher will punish that person right away /  |r Trong Tra Son Luu --   |t Sometimes I go to school hungry /  |r Maryam Jaffar Ismail --   |t The Author /  |r Eva Alerby and Jill Brown. 
588 |a Description based on print version record. 
650 0 |a Children of minorities  |x Education. 
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