The Accommodation Without Assimilation: Women and Medicine in Early New England: Sikh Immigrants in an American High School (The Anthropology of Contemporary Issues)

The Accommodation Without Assimilation: Women and Medicine in Early New England: Sikh Immigrants in an American High School (The Anthropology of Contemporary Issues)

by Margaret A . Gibson (Author)

Synopsis

A new version of the old 'immigrant success' story is circulating in America. It implies that the apparent academic progress of recent arrivals to our schools is the result of simple head work, opportunity, and a good attitude. Margaret Gibson has given us a complex antidote to this myth in a carefully researched and fully documented two-year study of Sikh children in a rural California educational setting. In addition to giving the reader the necessary cultural and religious background to understand this little known ethnic group, which originated in the Punjab area of northwestern India, the author details the context of their adjustment to life in America, particularly the factors that affect their progress in school.

The micro-ethnographic detail on economic adaptation, home life, and family values is skillfully linked to both larger societal issues (immigration policy, assimilation, minority-majority relations) and to educational theory on school performance. The result is a holistic portrait which reveals why Sikh high school students, despite language barriers, prejudice, and significant cultural differences, often outperform their majority peers and other United States minority groups.

One need not examine only the Japanese approach to education to find models to emulate. There are some immigrant patterns much closer at hand that arc at least as relevant. This study of 'accommodation without assimilation' is a very timely case in point and deserves a wide and critical readership. -Journal of American Ethnic History

$64.62

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 262
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 07 Apr 1988

ISBN 10: 0801495032
ISBN 13: 9780801495038

Media Reviews

A real contribution to the field of educational anthropology. . . . Gibson demonstrates what can be learned by focusing on success rather than on failure. -American Anthropologist


A very good book on a subject that should be of concern not only to anthropologists, but to educators, parents with school-aged children, indeed anyone who wishes to understand why certain ethnic groups seem to be more successful than others in using the American educational system to achieve upward mobility. -American Ethnologist