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University Week
Friday, October 30, 2009
International multicultural education was the theme for a daylong conference at the UW Friday, Oct. 30, 2009 that was also a book launching event for The Routledge International Companion to Multicultural Education, edited by the UW's James Banks.
The conference, titled "Education for Diversity in a Global Society," featured authors whose work appears in the volume.
The conference's keynote address was given by Suzanne Romaine, an internationally known linguist and Merton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford, who discussed language loss and developments in nations around the world. Other speakers were:
Authors of the Companion gave an overview of the volume, the historical development of multicultural education in their nations and the major debates in the field. They will also made scholarly observations and predictions about the future of international multicultural education.
A major objective of this conference was to facilitate a comparative study of multicultural education across nations and to discuss the implications of education and diversity in other nations for enriching theory, research, and practice in the United States.
The conference was sponsored by the UW Center for Multicultural Education, the Office of Minority Affairs and Diversity, the Diversity Research Institute, the Canadian Studies Center and the Center for Curriculum Transformation at the UW.
The Routledge International Companion to Multicultural Education is the first reference work to provide a comprehensive international description and analysis of multicultural education from many nations, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Norway, Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico. The volume consists of 40 newly commissioned chapters written by a prestigious group of internationally-known scholars.
Invitational Conference: Learning In and Out of School in Diverse Learning Environments: Life-Long, Life-Wide, Life-Deep
May 11, 2007
University of Washington
Sponsored by the LIFE Center (The Learning in Informal and Formal Environments Center), University of Washington, Stanford University, and SRI International
and the Center for Multicultural Education, University of Washington, Seattle
The increasing number of immigrant students, English Language Learners, and students of color in U. S. schools present educators with myriad challenges. Along with the challenges come opportunities to enrich teaching and learning through deep and meaningful engagement with diverse communities. The LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel convened by the LIFE Center (The Learning in Informal and Formal Environments Center), an NSF Science of Learning Center, and the Center for Multicultural Education, collaborated to put together a report that addresses questions such as, “How can educators help close the achievement gap by building upon the languages and other learning that occurs in the home and community cultures of students from diverse groups?” The resulting report of their findings is entitled, Learning In and Out of School in Diverse Learning Environments: Life-Long, Life-Wide, Life-Deep. At the conference, the report was released and dissemintated.
Authors of the report
James A. Banks, University of Washington
Kathryn H. Au, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Arnetha F. Ball, Stanford University
Philip Bell, University of Washington
Edmund W. Gordon, Teachers College Columbia University
Kris D. Gutiérrez, University of California, Los Angeles
Shirley Brice Heath, Brown University
Carol D. Lee, Northwestern University
Yuhshi Lee, University of Washington
Jabari Mahiri, University of California, Berekely
Na’ilah Suad Nasir, Stanford University
Guadalupe Valdés, Stanford University
Min Zhou , University of California, Los Angeles
Ambivalence
About the "M" Word:
Multiculturalism
in New Times and Glocalized Circumstances
A lecture sponsored by the The University of Washington Center for Multicultural Education in the College of Education, University of Washington at Bothell, and the Canadian Studies Center at Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies
Featured
Panel Speaker:
Handel K. Wright
May 11, 2006
University of Washington
Handel
K. Wright is an Associate
Professor in the department of educational studies at the University of British
Columbia. His research interests include the development of African cultural
studies, the intersection of cultural studies and education, Black and African
identity/identification, and social difference in qualitative research. He
has
published on a variety of issues including African cultural studies, the
transition from literature studies to cultural studies, drama studies in Africa,
North American curriculum theorizing, and the notion of an endarkened feminist
epistemology. In 2004, he published a book entitled: A Prescience of African
Cultural Studies. He is currently doing research on how Canadian and American
multiculturalism represents complex new youth identities.
Educating
Whiteness: Racial Predicament in
the Post Civil Rights Era
A panel discussion sponsered by the Center for Multicultural Education in the College of Education, Department of Women Studies, & the Latin American Studies Program at the University of Washington
Featured
Panel Speakers:
David Allen, Rebecca Aanerud, & Jonathan Warren
March 3, 2006
College of Education
University of Washington
David Allen is Chair of the Department of Women Studies at the University of Washington. He is also a professor of Psychosocial & Community Health. The focus of Professor Allen's work has been the intersection of nursing and social justice.
Rebecca Aanerud is currently the Associate Director of the Center for Innovation and Research in Graduate Education (CIRGE) at the University of Washington. She is also a lecturer in Women Studies. She has a number of publications in field of critical race theory and whiteness studies.
Jonathan Warren is Chair of Latin American Studies and Associate Prof. of International Studies. Within the broad area of critical race studies he has focused on whiteness, racism literacy, racial identity formations, and the links between everyday practices and racism in the US and Brazil. Prof. Warren is currently working on a comparative study of modernities in Brazil and Vietnam.
LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel Meeting January 12th - 14th, 2006
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
Stanford, CA
The Center for Multicultural Education and the Center for Learning in Informal and Formal Learning Environments (LIFE) established a LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel during the 2004 -2005 academic year. The overall purpose of the LIFE Center is to understand and advance human learning through a simultaneous focus on implicit, informal and formal learning, thus cultivating generalizable interdisciplinary theories that guide the design of effective new technologies and learning environments. The Centers mission is threefold: (1) conduct scientific research; (2) develop collaborative partnerships; and (3) build capacity. As a component of the LIFE project, the LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel is focusing on ways in which learning in informal settings can enhance the academic achievement of students of color and students who speak a first language other than English. The goal of the LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel is to identify what we know about diversity and informal learning and what we need to know. At its first meeting on the University of Washington campus on March 16 to 18, 2005, the LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel decided that its report would consist of two parts, a booklet and a DVD that would illustrate and give examples of the principles and concepts described in its report. The Panel presented a public forum related to its work at the University of Washington on March 17 that focused on Diversity in the Twenty First Century: Learning Challenges and Opportunities. The public forum was attended by more than 100 researchers and practitioners in the Seattle metropolitan area. The second meeting of the LIFE Diversity Consensus Panel took place in January 2006 at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, where James A. Banks, the chair of the committee, was a Fellow.
An Invitational Conference:Democracy and Diversity: Principles and Concepts for Educating Citizens in a Global World
April 29, 2005
University of Washington
The Center for Multicultural Education hasdeveloped a research and theory based guidelines for implementing citizenship education programs that focus on democracy, diversity and globalization. The report, which was developed by an International Consensus Panel and an International Review Committee, is title: Democracy and Diversity: Principles and Concepts for Educating Citizens in a Global Age. At the conference, the report was released and dissemintated.
Diversity, Citizenship, and Global Education Consensus Panel Members:
James A. Banks, University
of Washington, Chair
Carole L. Hahn, Emory University
Cherry A. McGee Banks, University of Washington, Bothell
Carlos E. Cortes, University of California, Riverside
Merry Merryfield, The Ohio State University
Kogila A. Moodley, University of British Columbia
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu, University of Tokyo
Audrey Osler, University of Leeds, England
Walter C. Parker, University of Washington, Seattle
Mark Purcell, University of Washington, Seattle
Farhat J. Ziadeh, University of Washington, Seattle
Annual Faculty Lecture
March 3, 7:00 pm
University of Washington
James
A. Banks
Russell F. Stark University Professor
Director, Center for Multicultural Education
College of Education
Professor James A. Banks presented the 29th Annual UW Faculty Lecture entitled Democracy, Diversity and Social Justice: Education in a Global Age. Professor Banks has been a researcher and leader in efforts to increase educational equality for all students in the United States and the world for more than three decades. As a fifth grade teacher in Chicago, then as a graduate student at Michigan State University, as a professor at the University of Washington beginning in 1969, Banks has pursued questions related to education, racial inequality, and social justice in more than 100 journal articles and 20 books. His most recent book, Diversity and Citizenship Education: Global Perspectives, examines the unity-diversity tension in 12 nations.
Streaming media of the Banks lecture is available at www.uwtv.org (high-speed connection required).
Ethnic Diversity and Citizenship Education in Multicultural Nation-States
An International Conference Sponsored by the Center for Multicultural Education, University of Washington, Seattle was held at the Bellagio Study and Conference Center in Italy. This conference was supported by the Rockfeller Foundation, New York and the Spencer Foundation, Chicago.
June 17-20, 2002
The increasing racial, ethnic, cultural, and language diversity in nation-states throughout the world, and the growing recognition and legitimization of diversity, are causing educators to rethink citizenship education. The world-wide ethnic revitalizations movements are challenging assimilationist notions of citizenship education and insisting that diverse cultures be reflected in the school, college and university curriculum. However, every pluralistic nation-state must also be concerned about unity and a set of shared values that will cement the commonwealth. This conference was held so that researchers could share findings about how citizenship education programs in different parts of the world deal with issues of unity and diversity.
The purposes of the conference were:
1. To provide a forum in which educators from different parts of the world could exchange ideas and research about ways to create effective citizenship education programs that promote unity and diversity.
2. To develop a network
of civic and multicultural educators in different parts of the world whose interactions
will be facilitated by future interactions at annual conferences of the American
Educational Research Association (AERA) and the Comparative and International
Education Society (CITES).
3. To develop guidelines and benchmarks that can be used by school practitioners
who are responsible for civic education programs in public and state schools.
4. To develop a manuscript from the conference papers for an edited book. Diversity
and Citizenship Education: Global Perspectives, James A. Banks, Editor.
Publisher: Jossey-Bass/Wiley, 350 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA 94104.
To
download conference program, click here.

This conference included the following educational researchers from these 11 nations:
Heribert Adam, Simon Faser University (Canada)
Robert Arnove, University of Indiana (USA)
Shigeru Asanuma, Tokyo Gakugei University (Japan)
James A. Banks, University of Washington, Seattle(USA)
Cherry A. McGee Banks, University of Washington, Bothell (USA)
Stephen Castles, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
Peter Figueroa, University of Southampton (United Kingdom)
Isak Froumin, The World Bank (Russia)
David Gillborn, University of London (United Kingdom)
Petronilha Betriz GonÁalves e Silva, Federal University of Sao Carlos
(Brasil)
Amy Gutmann, Princeton University (USA)
Reva Joshee, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (Canada)
Sigrid Luchtenberg, University of Essen (Germany)
Wang Min-Gang, Northwest Normal University (The People's Republic of China)
Kogila A. Moodley, University of British Columbia (Canada)
Fouad Moughrabi, Qattan Foundation (Palestine)
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu, University of Tokyo (Japan)
T.K. Oommen, Jawaharlal Nehru University (India)
Aihwa Ong, University of California, Berkeley (USA)
Walter Parker, University of Washington, Seattle (USA)
Ozlem Sensoy, University of Washington, Seattle (USA)
Moshe Tatar, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel)
Robert E. Verhine, Federal University of Bahia (Brazil)
Rong Wang, Peking University (The People's Republic of China)
College of Education, University of Washington
Box 353600 Seattle, WA 98195-3600
coe@u.washington.edu