Using an authentic assessment approach, two California State University, Fullerton, faculty members developed instructional strategies in support of an assignment that requires students to situate their families within a historical framework. We describe our efforts to provide students with there-search skills to successfully complete the assignment. We used, among other methods, reflective writing assignments to measure the growth of students’ intercultural understanding.
Acuña, R. F. (2000). Anything but Mexican: Chicanos in contemporary Los Angeles. London: Verso.
2.
Alvarez, R. R., Jr. (1987). Familia: Migration and adaptation in Baja and Alta California, 1800-1975. Berkeley: University of California Press.
3.
Andrade, R. A. (1990). Latino students: Struggle for identity. Latino Studies Journal, 1(2), 48-59.
4.
Balderrama, S. R. (2002). This trend called diversity. Library Trends, 49, 194-214. Retrieved April 24, 2003, from factiva%20database.
5.
Black, C., Crest, S., & Volland, M. (2001). Building a successful information literacy infrastructure on the foundation of librarian-faculty collaboration. Research Strategies, 18, 215-225. Retrieved April 24, 2003, from Science Direct database.
6.
Boxall, B., & Herndon, R. F. (2000, August 15). Far from urban gateways, racial lines blur in suburbs; Culture: One in four births is of mixed race in some upwardly mobile neighborhoods. Deep divisions remain elsewhere. Los Angeles Times, p. A1. Retrieved April 26, 2003, from Proquest Newspapers database.
7.
Cal State Fullerton Public Affairs Office. (2003, December 10). Cal State Fullerton fact sheet. Retrieved February 4, 2004, from http://campusapps.fullerton.edu/news/press/factsheet.PDF
8.
Canto al pueblo: An anthology of experiences. (1978). San Antonio, TX: Penca Books.
9.
Castro Belcher, S. (2001, Spring). Interview with Richard Chabran, Director of the Communities for Virtual Research (CVR) at UC Riverside. Teaching to Change LA, 1(2). Retrieved September 16, 2002, from http://tcla.gseis.ucla.edu/divide/politics/chabran.html
10.
Cisneros, S. (1991). The house on Mango Street. New York: Vintage.
11.
Cox, S. (2002, February 21). Information literacy guide, Pollak Library, California State University, Fullerton. Retrieved September 18, 2002, from http://www.library.fullerton.edu/information_comp/
12.
Curzon, S. C. (2002, July 9). Information competency, information competency work group, California State University. Retrieved September 18, 2002, from http://library.csun.edu/susan.curzon/infocmp.html
13.
Delgado, R., & Stefancic, J. (Eds.). (1998). The Latino condition. New York: New York University Press.
14.
Downing, K. E. (2000). Instruction in a multicultural setting: Teaching and learning with students of color. In T. E. Jacobson & H. C. Williams (Eds.), Teaching the new library to today’s users (pp. 47-70). New York: Neal-Schuman.
15.
Farmer, L. S. J. (1997, September/October). Authentic assessment of information literacy through electronic products. Book Report, 16, 11-13.
16.
Fisher, B. J. (1996). Using journals in the social psychology class: Helping students apply course concepts to life experiences. Teaching Sociology, 24, 157-165.
17.
Freire, P. (2001). The Paulo Freire readerA. M. Araújo Freire & D. Macedo, (Eds.). New York: Continuum.
18.
Gale encyclopedia of multicultural America (2nd ed.). (2000). Detroit, MI: Gale Group. Retrieved March 15, 2004, from NetLibrary database.
19.
Griswold del Castillo, R. (1984). La familia: Chicano families in the Urban Southwest, 1848 to the present. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
20.
Herrington, A. J. (1997). Developing and responding to major writing projects. New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 69, 67-75. Retrieved March 15, 2004, from Wiley Interscience database.
21.
Hickey, M. G. (1999). Bringing history home: Local and family history projects for grades K-6. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
22.
Iadicola, P. (1981). Schooling and social control: Symbolic violence and Hispanic students’ attitudes toward their own ethnic group. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 3, 361-383.
23.
Maiewskij-Hay, V. (1999). Global history from the local perspective: An instructional technique. Teaching History, 24(2), 71-77.
24.
Meyer, C. A. (1992). What’s the difference between authentic and performance assessment?Educational Leadership, 49, 39-40.
25.
Montoya, M. E. (1998). Masks and identity. In R. Delgado & J. Stefancic (Eds.), The Latino condition (pp. 37-43). New York: New York University Press.
26.
Muñoz, C. (1989). The sixties Chicano movement: Youth, identity, power (2nd ed.). London: Verso.
27.
Nava, G. (Director). (1995). My Family/Mi Familia [motion picture]. United States: New Line Home Video; Turner Home Entertainment.
28.
Rich, A. (1986). Invisibility in academe. In Blood, bread, and poetry: Selected prose, 1979-1985 (pp. 198-201). New York: Norton.
29.
Rosales, F. A. (1997). Preface. In Chicano! The history of the Mexican American civil rights movement (2nd ed., pp. viii-xix). Houston: Arte Publico Press.
30.
Smith, T. G. (2001). Keeping track: Librarians, composition instructors, and student writers use the research journal. Research Strategies, 18, 21-28. Retrieved February 6, 2004, from Science Direct database.
31.
Soleil, N. (2000). Toward a pedagogy of reflective learning: Lived experience in research and practice. Journal of College Reading and Learning, 31(1), 73-83. Retrieved February 2, 2004, from INFOTRAC Expanded Academic ASAP database.
32.
Vamer, D., & Peck, S. R. (2003). Learning from learning journals: The benefits and challenges of using learning journals. Journal of Management Education, 27, 52-77. Retrieved February 1, 2004, from ABI Inform Global database.
33.
Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language. (1989). New York: Gramercy Books.
34.
Wiggins, G. (1990). The case for authentic assessment. ERIC Digest (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED32861). Retrieved April 26, 2003, from ERIC database.