Latino
Issues and Experiences in the U.S.
Websites
The
Latino Civil Rights Crisis -- a number of good papers presented
at a conference sponsored by the Harvard Civil Rights Project.
Achievement
Gap and Obstacles Affecting Latina/o Educational Development
-- an excellent collection of links to many good reports.
The
Tomas Rivera Policy Institute -- an organization that addresses
key issues affecting Latino communities through policy-relevant
research and activism.
Educating
Latinos: A Special Report -- an excellent series of radio
programs broadcast in 2002.
Hispanic
Education Fact Sheet -- a summary of useful statistics and
other information about Latinos and education in the U.S.
Hispanics
Dropping Out of U.S. Schools: Measuring the Challenge -- a
2003 discussion of how Hispanic dropout rates are defined and
measured.
Latinos
in Higher Education: Many Enroll, Too Few Graduate -- a 2002
analysis of why Latino college completion rates are low.
Race
in American Public Schools: Rapidly Resegregating School Districts
-- research by the Civil Rights Project at Harvard University
showing that virtually all school districts analyzed have "lower
levels of inter-racial exposure since 1986, suggesting a trend
towards resegregation" -- the issue is especially significant
for Latino and African American students.
Bilingual
Education and Latino Civil Rights -- an article presented
by the Civil Rights Project at Harvard University.
Latino
USA -- a good radio program about issues and perspectives
relevant to the Latino experience in the U.S.
Celebrating
Hispanic Heritage -- activities and information to complement
classroom topics.
Connecting
with Latino Children: Bridging Cultural Gaps with Children's Literature
-- an excellent article about the importance of using culturally
relevant literature in the education of Latino youth -- reports
that this "helps teachers and children truly connect by increasing
teachers' understandings of the specific cultures of their students"
-- includes discussion of many specific books.
Esmeralda
Santiago's Almost a Woman -- a great educational site
about a film made from Santiago's memoir about growing up in New
York City -- includes selections from the book, essays by other
Puerto Rican authors, lesson plan ideas, and much more.
Puerto
Ricans in America -- three great essays by notable Puerto
Ricans -- Sonia Nieto, Virginia Sanchez Korrol, and Felix Matos
Rodriguez -- about the process of "becoming an American."
Latino
Cultures and Communities -- a number of excellent curricular
units, in different disciplines, by the Yale-New Haven Teachers
Institute.
Latino
Resources at the Smithsonian Institute -- historical/cultural
resources.
National
Latino Communications Center -- extensive historical/cultural
resources including video.
Celebrate
Hispanic Heritage -- teacher resources.
Hispanic
Heritage Month -- lots of good links.
Hispanic
Heritage Month Information -- more useful information.
Hispanic
Heritage Awards Foundation -- "celebrates the achievements
of Hispanic Americans and provides role models for our youth."
National
Council of La Raza (NCLR)-- a Latino civil rights and advocacy
organization -- good information and perspective about many important
issues.
Chicano
History -- a good collection of resources about Mexican-American
experience.
Hispanic-American
Students and Learning Style
-- an interesting article with good overview and valuable specifics.
Strategies
for Improving the Educational Outcomes of Latinas -- a good
review of research about the school experiences of Hispanic young
women (Latinas) and what schools/eductors can do to be more effective
with this group of students.
The
Daughters of Aztlán: A Socio-Historical Survey of Chicanas in
the United States -- a history of Mexican American women in
the U.S.
CLNet
-- a resource center from the University of California on Chicano
and Latino issues, including an online library, a virtual museum,
a research center, and more.
CLNet
Bilingual Education -- discussion boards, history, instructional
programs, and more.
CLNet
Folklore/Customs/Traditions -- lots of links to information
about Chicano/Latino traditions.
PuertoRicans.com
-- a site with good cultural/historical and other material --
lots of very good links to research and writing about the Puerto
Rican experience in the U.S.
The
Home Environment of Gifted Puerto Rican Children: Family Factors
Which Support High Achievement
-- a study of ten academically successful Puerto Rican students
and their parents to identify family factors that may contribute
to high achievement.
Prep
for Prep -- a successful program that demonstrates the fundamental
power and value of high expectations and real opportunity in education.
Portraits
of Four Schools: Meeting the Needs of Immigrant Students and Their
Families -- an excellent report about four schools that are
part of the School of the 21st Century project, a school reform
model that is community based and associated with the School Development
project at Yale University -- good details about effective schools
and educational policy and practice.
Sociocultural
Influences on Learning and Teaching -- a brief essay about
how culture influences learning orientations.
The
Literature of the Puerto Rican Migration in the United States
-- a good annotated bibliography.
Esperanza
Rising: Connecting Latino Students to Literature -- a good
curricular unit by the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute.
Expressions
of Anti-Racism through Painting: The Puerto Rican Community from
West Side Story to Connecticut -- a creative curricular unit
plan by a teacher in the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute.
Nicholasa
Mohr -- good biographical and other information about this
important Nuyorican author, at a site called, Voices from the
Gaps: Women Writers of Color.
Gloria
Anzaldua -- information about this important Chicana writer
and activist.
Chicana/Latina
Authors -- information about many great Latina/Chicana writers,
at the site, Voices from the Gaps: Women Writers of Color.
Other
Voices: Latino and Chicano Literature and Identity in America
-- a good curricular unit plan by a teacher in the Yale-New Haven
Teachers Institute.
Weblinks
about Esmeralda Santiago -- good resources about this important
Puerto Rican author (When I was Puerto Rican, America's
Dream, and other books).
Women
and Writing in Puerto Rico: An Interview with Ana Lydia Vega
-- an interview with one of Puerto Rico's most popular writers.
El
Boricua -- "a monthly bilingual publication for Puerto
Ricans" -- a good resource about the cultural history of
Puerto Rico -- biographies, poems, children's songs, vocaublary,
politics, holidays, recipes, and more -- lots of good links, too.
Puerto
Rican Music -- a good overview of Puerto Rican music traditions
and contributions.
Puerto
Rican Folkloric Dance -- dance history and resources.
Los
Pleneros de la 21 -- a music group that presents the Afro-Puerto
Rican traditions of The Bomba and Plena and includes many major
Puerto Rican musicians.
Jimmy
Santiago Baca Homepage -- an excellent contemporary poet,
novelist, and screenwriter who presents with power, honesty, and
insight some of the Mexican American experience -- recipient of
many national awards -- a powerful personal story.
Reggaeton
Makes Its Mark on the Bronx -- a radio story about reggaeton,
a relatively new and hugely popular musical form that combines
reggae, hip-hop, Spanish and Spanish-influenced lyrics, and more,
to create a sort of Latin hip-hop -- with roots in Puerto Rico,
Jamaica, and the Dominican Republic.
Tego
Calderon -- information about a major reggaeton artist who
discusses issues of race and racism in his music.
Ozomatli
-- a good interview and sound clips of a cool multi-ethnic band
from Los Angeles that offers valuable insight into the Latino
immigrant experience. Latin, hip-hop, funk, and more. Scroll way
down the page to find a radio segment about them, under their
name.
Music
Nortena: Accordion on the Texas Border -- a great NPR site
about Tex-Mex music -- excellent audio clips and lots of good
links.
Antonio
"Tony" De La Rosa: Tejano Conjunto Accordionist
-- a Tex-Mex accordion player who has received a National Endowment
of the Arts Heritage Award.
Santiago
Jimenez, Jr.: Tejano Accordionist & Singer -- another
great Tex-Mex accordionist who has received a National Endowment
of the Arts Heritage Award.
Felipe
Garcia Villamil: Afro-Cuban Drummer -- a Cuban American drummer
who has received a National Endowment of the Arts Heritage Award.
Nestor
Torres -- a jazz flute master talks about his newest CD, 'Sin
Palabras (Without Words)' -- this is a radio program interview,
so listen to the music, too.
Voices
from the Gaps -- a great website about "women writers
of color" -- good bios and links.
Latino/a
Health Issues -- good resources and links.
Closing
the Health Gap -- "an educational campaign designed to
help make good health an important issue among racial and ethnic
minority populations who are affected by serious diseases and
health conditions at far greater rates than other Americans."
Office
of Minority and Multicultural Health -- a website by the New
Jersey Dept. of Health with useful information about cultural
competency in providing health services to diverse populations.
The
Pew Hispanic Center: Research and Surveys on the U.S. Hispanic
Population -- a website to facilitate and display many new
and developing issues concerning the Latino population in the
United States.
HispanicOnline.com
- Education -- a section of a website dedicated to news about
Latinos in Education, and a source of Hispanic historical information
as well as a resource of Latino students looking to go on to college.
The
White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanic
Americans -- a resourceful website of programs and 'tool kits'
for families and teachers looking to reach the standards of No
Child Left Behind.
NALEO
Educational Fund -- a resource for programs and information
concerning the development of policies concerning the ability
of Latinos to access the political process.
Some
Good Books and Articles
Aguirre-Molina, M. et al., (Eds.) 2001. Health
Issues in the Latino Community. Jossey-Bass.
Baca, J. 1990.
Immigrants in Our Own Land and Selected Poems. New Directions.
Baca, J. 2002.
C-Train and Thirteen Mexicans: Poems. Grove Press.
Baca, J. 2002.
A Place to Stand: The Making of a Poet. Grove Press.
Berg, C. 2002.
Latino
Images in Film: Stereotypes, Subversion, Resistance. University
of Texas Press.
Caravantes,
E. 2006. Clipping Their Own Wings: The Incompatibility between
Latino Culture and American Education, University Press of
America.
Carger, C.
1996. Of Borders and Dreams: A Mexican-American Experience
of Urban Education. Teachers College Press.
Carrasquillo,
A. 1991. Hispanic Children and Youth in the United States:
A Resource Guide. Garland.
Conchas, G.
2006. The Color of Success: Race and High Achieving Urban Youth.
Teachers College Press.
Darder, A.
et al., (Eds.) 1997. Latinos and Education: A Critical Reader.
Routledge.
Dunn, R.,
S. Griggs, and G. Price. (1993). Learning Styles of Mexican-American
and Anglo-American Elementary-School Students. Journal of Multicultural
Counseling and Development, 21(4): 237-47.
Espinoza-Herold,
M. 2003. Issues in Latino Education: Race, School Culture,
and the Politics of Academic Success. Allyn and Bacon.
Ferris, S.
&Sandoval, R. 1997. The Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez
and the Farmworkers Movement. Harcourt.
Flores, J.
1993. Divided Borders: Essays on Puerto Rican Identity.
Arte Publico Press.
Flores, J.
2000. From Bomba to Hip-Hop: Puerto Rican Culture and Latino
Identity. Columbia University Press.
Gonzalez,
M. et al., (Ed.) 1998. Educating Latino Students: A Guide to
Successful Practice. Technomic Publishing.
Kanellos,
N. 1993. Short Fiction by Hispanic Writers of the United States.
Arte Publico Press.
Luis, W. 1997.
Dance Between Two Cultures: Latino Caribbean Literature Written
in the United States. Vanderbilt University Press.
Mohr, N. 1973.
Nilda. Harper.
Mohr, N. 1975.
El Bronx Remembered. Harper.
Mohr, N. 1985.
Rituals of Survival: A Woman's Portfolio. Arte Público.
Nieto, S.
(Ed.) 2000. Puerto Rican Students in U.S. Schools. Lawrence
Erlbaum.
Reyes, P.
et al., (Eds.), 1999. Lessons from High Performing Hispanic
Schools: Creating Learning Communities. Teachers College Press.
Rivera, R.
& Nieto, S. (Eds.) 1993. The Education of Latino Students
in Massachusetts: Issues, Research, and Policy Implications.
University of Massachusetts Press.
Rodriguez,
L. 1993. Always Running: La Vida Loca, Gang Days in L.A.
Simon & Schuster.
Romo, H. 1996.
Latino High School Graduation: Defying the Odds. University
of Texas Press.
Rosales, F.
1997. Chicano: The History of the Mexican American Civil Rights
Movement. Arte Publico Press.
Santiago,
E. 1994. When I Was Puerto Rican. Vintage Books.
Santiago,
E. 1997. America's Dream. Harper Collins.
Santiago,
R. (Ed.) 1995. Boricuas: Influential Puerto Rican Writings:
An Anthology. Ballantine Books.
Slavin, R.
& Calderon, M. 2001. Effective Programs for Latino Students.
Lawrence Erlbaum.
Torres, S.
1996. Hispanic Voices: Hispanic Health Educators Speak Out.
National League for Nursing Press.
Trueba, E.
1999. Latinos Unidos: From Cultural Diversity to the Politics
of Solidarity. Rowman & Littlefield.
Trumball,
E. 2001. Bridging Cultures Between Home and School: A Guide
for Teachers, with a Special Focus on Immigrant Latino Families.
Lawrence Erlbaum.
Urciuoli,
B. 1996. Exposing Prejudice: Puerto Rican Experiences of Language,
Race and Class. Westview Press.
Valdés, G.
1996. Con Respeto: Bridging the Distances Between Culturally
Diverse Families and Schools. Teachers College Press.
Valdes, G.
2001. Learning and Not Learning English: Latino Students in
American Schools. Teachers College Press.
Valencia,
R. (Ed.) 1991. Chicano School Failure and Success. Falmer
Press.
Valenzuela,
A. 1999. Subtractive Schooling: U.S.-Mexican Youth and the
Politics of Caring. SUNY Press.
Walsh, C.
1996. Pedagogy and the Struggle for Voice: Issues of Language,
Power and Schooling for Puerto Ricans. Bergin & Garvey.
Wicks, S.
1997. Integrating American Popular Regional Music Into the Curriculum.
Phi Delta Kappan, v. 78.
Yosso, T.
2005. Critical Race Counterstories along the Chicana/Chicano
Educational Pipeline. Routledge.
Yong, F.,
& N. Ewing. (1992). A Comparative Study of the Learning-Style
Preferences among Gifted African-American, Mexican-American and
American Born Chinese Middle-Grade Students. Roeper Review,
14(3): 120-123.
Zambrana,
R. (Ed.) 1995. Understanding Latino Families: Scholarship,
Policy, and Practice. Sage Publications.
Zentella,
A. 1997. Growing Up Bilingual: Puerto Rican Children in New
York. Blackwell.
MacDonald,
V. 2004. Latino Education in the United States: A Narrated
History from 1513-2000. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Some
Good Videos/Films
Puerto Rican Heritage -- some good basic
information -- available from http://www.libraryvideo.com
Like Water
for Chocolate -- an award winning fiction film based on the
book by Laura Esquivel --
reviewed by Roger Ebert