Value revolution: commitment to multicultural change Bell Hux was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky in 1952. She was born in the apartheid era and went to high school at the beginning of the civil rights movement. As Hook was a young African American who studied at one of the early comprehensive high schools, she experienced racial discrimination and apartheid. Her work explains how she lives during these periods and shows how her experience influences her emotions.
• Multicultural education as a philosophy, concept, concept - a series of beliefs and values that describe the influence of race and culture on lifestyle, experience, and the identity of a group of people. As a philosophy, multicultural education includes equality and excellence of cultural pluralism and education. • Multicultural education is a process. In a more comprehensive educational understanding, it is an educational approach that uses multiculturalism as a continuous and systematic element. As a process, multicultural education should not be developed as a plan or method, but should be developed as a phased process of thought and action. • Multicultural education as a reform movement: structural and procedural change in education reflects greater changes in society, socio-cultural, racial, ethnic and linguistic diversity. Multicultural education as a sport focuses on giving individuals socialization and the ability to change power.
Value revolution: commitment to multicultural change Bell Hux was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky in 1952. She was born in the apartheid era and went to high school at the beginning of the civil rights movement. As Hook was a young African American who studied at one of the early comprehensive high schools, she experienced racial discrimination and apartheid. - Multiculturalism Before I started this course, I naturally thought that there was still racial discrimination in this country. I began thinking more about the real situation of the world, and the topics discussed in the class began to intrigue me. I was angry when I read the word "racial discrimination" when I first read Tatum's book