Narrative
& Experience in Multicultural Education.
(2005). JoAnn Phillion, Ming Fan He
& F. Michael Connelly (Editors). California:
SAGE Publications. 336 pp. $34.95.
ISBN 1-4129-0582-6.
Review
by: Keonya Booker
Assistant
Professor, Curry School of Education
University of Virginia
As the field of education
becomes increasingly focused on issues of diversity, there is
a pronounced need to explore the lived experiences and pertinent
realities of different cultural groups. In Narrative &
Experience in Multicultural Education , editors Phillion,
He, and Connelly contend that new methodologies in qualitative
research, namely narrative research, can provide insight and understanding
of the multiple realities experienced by students and teachers.
This book is a response to a swell of multicultural courses and
curricula across the country. The editors encourage the reader
to engage the book with an "experiential" as well as an "imaginative
eye" (p. 2). In fact, throughout the entire book, the reader is
asked to connect their own personal experiences with those found
in the narratives.
The book is divided
into six major units highlighting critical educational issues
in African American, Latino, and Native American communities.
Readers are introduced to narratives focusing on a successful
school-community partnership, how one professor uses autobiography
in her classroom setting, and the ways in which certain ethnic
groups must disregard native cultural identities in order to assimilate
into mainstream society. There is a great amount of information
and perspective offered in the book as readers are offered glimpses
into conversations with Latino mothers concerned about schooling
effects on their children and culture-based curricula. The editors
present thought-provoking papers on bilingual programs, landmark
legal cases, tensions between Arabs and Jews, and how narrative
methods relate to democracy and equality in education.
Each chapter is well
organized starting with an autobiographical sketch of each author
and ending with recommended readings and questions for reflection.
The editors do a careful job of presenting the advantages of narrative
methodology in the qualitative research process. Through an emphasis
on the connection between emic and etic perspectives, the reader
is encouraged to step outside of traditional comfort zones and
embrace narrative concepts of meaning, experience, and identity.
The book has wonderfully descriptive and vivid language that transports
the reader directly into conversations, settings, and contexts.
One must actively engage with the text. It is difficult to mindlessly
read these essays without critically thinking and reflecting on
the process.
Because
multiculturalism is a largely evolving field with varying disciplinary
bases, this book has a heavy focus on social foundations, teacher
education (primarily K-12), and philosophy. Most of the papers
assume the reader has a background in narrative methodology or
at least an understanding of its basic premises. In light of this,
one should not read this book for a primer on "doing" narrative
research. Rather, this is a compilation of fieldwork completed
by several researchers in many domains of education. Although
it is not directly applicable in the field of advising, it is
a good resource for educators who want to explore how issues of
identity, race, economics, and gender are experienced in the classroom
setting.