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Paradise, Ruth; Robles, Adriana – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2016
This article presents an ethnographic description of parents' and other community members' participation in the everyday life of two rural schools in indigenous Mexican communities. Adults and children, together with school authorities, transform their schools by introducing a collective orientation that contrasts with the emphasis on individual…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Mexicans, Learning Experience, Culturally Relevant Education
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Rockwell, Elsie – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2009
This article analyses the changing role of the principal in Mexico, during a period, 1921-1934, in which the configurations sustaining and surrounding schooling were profoundly transformed. It compares the experience of three "directores" working in towns that differed in their expectations and relationship to state and federal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Federal Government, Principals, Administrator Role
Vaughan, Mary Kay – 1997
In the 1930s, Mexican rural schools became arenas for cultural politics--the process of articulating and disputing definitions of culture, from national identity to the broader sense of social behavior and meaning. Created in 1921, the Secretaria de Educacion Publica (SEP) set up federal rural schools to nationalize and modernize rural peasants.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Educational History, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education