Bag om Kids in Cultures
Kids in Cultures educates (while entertaining) children on key concepts of diversity, including culture, ethnicity, and multicultural societies. Kids learn about these concepts through engaging stories of children in various historical periods and cultural settings in Southeastern Wisconsin. The authors are authorities in their fields. Stories include the following. - In "Mammoth meat," archaeologist Dr. Alice Kehoe uses evidence from a prehistoric site on Lake Michigan to speculate on the early culture of Paleoindians that lived 13,500 years ago. - In "Barbara Smith is German?" cultural anthropologist Dr. Jill Florence Lackey introduces kids to a family that denied its ethnic background in the past because of stereotypes associated with it. - In "Showing up is important: A Hmong virtue," Dr. Chia Youyee Vang and Tujntsuj Laujxeeb Yang take young people inside a small community that maintains ethnic bonds in distinctive ways. - In "Firefly nights: An urban Oneida story," enrolled Oneida Indian, Kitty Hill, narrates an enchanting story about a family that maintains ties to a common homeland. - In "Snow falls in Bronzeville: A story of a lost central city neighborhood," cultural anthropologist Dr. Sienna Jacks gives a mesmerizing account of a close-knit neighborhood where African Americans and Jews cooperated for the good of the residents. - In "The Braves take the World Series: A Polish and Mexican story," cultural anthropologist, Dr. Jill Florence Lackey introduces kids to ethnic groups that found their common grounds. Each story provides sections that challenge kids to identify aspects of culture or ethnicity and learn ways that ethnic groups can work together for the benefit of the larger society.
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