Title: Who is in your class Who lives in your world
1Who is in your class?Who lives in your world?
- Thoughts on how to teach and reach your students
2If the World Were a Village of 100 PeopleIf we
could reduce the worlds population to a village
of precisely 100 people, with all existing human
ratios remaining the same, the demographics would
look something like this
- The village would have 60 Asians, 14 Africans, 12
Europeans, 8 Latin Americans, 5 from the USA and
Canada, and 1 from the South Pacific51 would be
male, 49 would be female82 would be non-white
18 white67 would be non-Christian 33 would be
Christian80 would live in substandard
housing67 would be unable to read50 would be
malnourished and 1 dying of starvation33 would
be without access to a safe water supply 39
would lack access to improved sanitation24
would not have any electricity (And of the 76
that do have electricity, most would only use it
for light at night.)7 people would have access
to the Internet1 would have a college
education1 would have HIV2 would be near
birth 1 near death5 would control 32 of the
entire worlds wealth all 5 would be US
citizens33 would be receiving --and attempting
to live on-- only 3 of the income of the
village - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1v9xJPiIlQU
3Stats on North Carolina
By 2020, estimates show that half of the U.S.
population will be from groups traditionally
referred to as minority. In other word, the
majority culture will become the minority
culture.
4Typical Class
- We sort students using many different categories
- socio-economic level academic ability learning
differences religious/cultural heritage family
structure English speaker differently-abled
race local vs. foreign suburban/urban/rural ado
pted vegetarian vs. vegan vs. omnivore Gifted
vs. Resource - Shy vs. Outgoing Trouble maker vs. never a
problem -
5Teacher choices and practices
- As the teacher, you can create a classroom
community where these differences are accepted,
celebrated, and/or regarded as facts, not as
value-laden details. - Example BlueJah, Daniel, Quamaine, Zenevia
(Shay-Shay), Aaron (Smitty) - Strategies shoe circle, skin tones rainbow,
fair vs. equal, travel across the room,
6How to help prepare your students
- Learn how to infuse classroom with Multicultural
Education - Be careful to not teach the history and stories
of people of color and women only during February
and March - Avoid Stomp and Chomp or Tourist approach (A
lesson on Mexico does not equal chips and
piñatas.)
7Multicultural Education
- Multicultural education is a philosophical
concept built on the ideals of freedom, justice,
equality, equity, and human dignity as
acknowledged in various documents, such as the
U.S. Declaration of Independence, constitutions
of South Africa and the United States, and the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by
the United Nations. - It affirms our need to prepare student for their
responsibilities in an interdependent world. - It recognizes the role schools can play in
developing the attitudes and values necessary for
a democratic society.  It values cultural
differences and affirms the pluralism that
students, their communities, and teachers
reflect. It challenges all forms of
discrimination in schools and society through the
promotion of democratic principles of social
justice. - Source The National Association for
Multicultural Education is the leading
international and national organization in the
area of multicultural education. For additional
information, contact NAME at name_at_nameorg.org or
visit the website at www.nameorg.org.
8Tell the whole story
- Lewis Latimer was born in Chelsea, Massachusetts
in 1848. He was the son of George and Rebecca
Latimer, escaped slaves from Virginia. When Lewis
Latimer was a boy his father George was arrested
and tried as a slave fugitive. The judge ordered
his return to Virginia and slavery, but money was
raised by the local community to pay for George
Latimer's freedom. George Latimer later went
underground fearing his re-enslavement, a great
hardship for Lewis' family. - Lewis Latimer enlisted in the Union Navy at the
age of 15 by forging the age on his birth
certificate. Upon the completion of his military
service, Lewis Latimer returned to Boston,
Massachusetts where he was employed by the patent
solicitors Crosby Gould. While working in the
office Lewis began the study of drafting and
eventually became their head draftsmen. During
his employment with Crosby Gould, Latimer
drafted the patent drawings for Alexander Graham
Bell's patent application for the telephone,
spending long nights with the inventor.
9Why consider Cultural Responsiveness?
- Passage of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001
(NCLB) and the resulting requirement that schools
report disaggregated data have focused a
spotlight on the achievement gaps that have
persisted for years between children of color,
children in poverty, and English language
learning (ELL) students and their mainstream
peers. - Achievement gaps and significant inequities
continue to exist for a wide range of educational
indicators including grades, scores on
standardized tests, dropout rates, and
participation in higher education (Education
Trust, 2004 NCES, 2001 Viadero Johnston,
2000). - Disparities in achievement stem in part from a
lack of fit between traditional school
practiceswhich are derived almost exclusively
from European American cultureand the home
cultures of diverse students and their families
(Cummins, 1986 Delpit, 1995 Ladson-Billings,
1995). - According to this theory, children whose cultural
background is European American have an innate
educational advantage, while children from other
backgrounds are required "to learn through
cultural practices and perceptions other than
their own" (Hollins, 1996). This "cultural
mismatch" is often a result of widely divergent
worldviews about such fundamental concepts as
human nature, time, the natural environment, and
social relationships (Sowers, 2004).
10More thoughts on why being a culturally
responsive teacher might help students to close
the achievement gap?
- Education system rooted in the dominant culture
is inherently biased. When one set of beliefs is
held up as "right" or "normal," the values of
other cultural groups are treated as less valid,
and children from those groups can be perceived
as culturally deficient. Evidence of this
attitude can be found in statistics reflecting
higher rates of discipline and suspension among
children of color, particularly African American
boys, and disproportionate numbers of minority
and ELL students in special education. At the
same time, these students are sharply
underrepresented in gifted and advanced placement
classes. - By adopting culturally responsive school
practices, educators seek to address issues of
educational inequity and confront institutional
bias and discrimination. - Source Northwest Regional Education Laboratory
http//www.nwrel.org/request/2005june/incontext.ht
ml
11Culturally Responsive Teaching is a pedagogy that
recognizes the importance of including students'
cultural references in all aspects of learning
(Ladson-Billings,1994).
- Some of the characteristics of culturally
responsive teaching are - Positive perspectives on parents and families
- Communication of high expectations
- Learning within the context of culture
- Student-centered instruction
- Culturally mediated instruction
- Reshaping the curriculum
- Teacher as facilitator
12Positive Perspectives on Parents and Families
- "Whether its an informal chat as the parent
brings the child to school, or in phone
conversation or home visits, or through
newsletters sent home, teachers can begin a
dialogue with family members that can result in
learning about each of the families through
genuine communication." - -- Sonia Nieto
- Seek to understand parents' hopes, concerns and
suggestions - Conduct needs assessments and surveys (in the
parents' first language) of what parents expect
of the school community - Establish parent-teacher organizations or
committees to work collaboratively for the
benefit of the students - Conduct home visits in which parents are able to
speak freely about their expectations and
concerns for their children - Keep parents apprised of services offered by the
school - Send weekly/monthly newsletters (in the home
language) informing parents of school activities - Conduct monthly meeting at parents' homes or
community centers to inform parents of school
activities - Host family nights at school to introduce parents
to concepts and ideas children are learning in
their classes and to share interactive journals - Gain cross-cultural skills necessary for
successful exchange and collaboration - Research the cultural background of students'
families - Visit local community centers to find out about
the cultural activities and beliefs of the
students - Tour students' neighborhoods to identify local
resources and "funds of knowledge" (Moll et al.,
1992) - Source Teaching Diverse Learnershttp//www.allia
nce.brown.edu/tdl/
13Student-Centered Instruction
- "In our multicultural society, culturally
responsive teaching reflects democracy at its
highest level. It means doing whatever it takes
to ensure that every child is achieving and ever
moving toward realizing her or his potential." - --Joyce Taylor-Gibson ()
- Promote student engagement
- Have students generate lists of topics they wish
to study and/or research - Allow students to select their own reading
material - Share responsibility of instruction
- Initiate cooperative learning groups (Padron,
Waxman, Rivera, 2002) - Have students lead discussion groups or reteach
concepts - Create inquiry based/discovery oriented
curriculum - Create classroom projects that involve the
community - Encourage a community of learners
- Form book clubs or literature circles (Daniels,
2002) for reading discussions - Conduct Student-Directed Sharing Time (Brisk
Harrington, 2000) - Use cooperative learning strategies such as
Jigsaw (Brisk Harrington, 2000)
14Communication of High Expectations
- When a teacher expresses sympathy over failure,
lavishes praise for completing a simple task, or
offers unsolicited help, the teacher may send
unintended messages of low expectations. --
Kathleen Serverian-Wilmeth - Communicate clear expectations
- Be specific in what you expect students to know
and be able to do - Create an environment in which there is genuine
respect for students and a belief in their
capability - Encourage students to meet expectations for a
particular task - Offer praise when standards are met
15Language Diversity
- English as a Second Language (ESL)
- Sheltered Instruction (SIOP)
- Preparation
- Building Background
- Comprehensible Input
- Strategies
- Interaction
- Practice/Application
- Lesson Delivery
- Review and Assessment
- Bilingual instruction
16How to welcome and teach all students
- Remember Vygotsky and language acquisition and
benefits of social interactions - Best Practices
- Environmental print
- Culturally conscious literature
- Language buddies
- Invite parent/family involvement
- Find ways to integrate facts about native country
- Connect families to local resources, educate
yourself
17Educating Exceptional Children
- Greet the child, un-open the gift.
- Prepare for a year of huge professional growth.
- Remember all children can learn.
- Remember basics of child development and learning
stages and milestones. - Best practices tend to overlap for children with
exceptional needs and students in regular
education. - All children benefit from cooperation and
collaboration among home, school and community.
18Definitions
- Visually impaired (VI)- A vision loss, which,
even with correction, adversely affects
educational performance to the extent specially
designed instruction is required. The loss is as
follows visual acuity even with prescribed
lenses that is 20/70 or worse in the better eye
or visual acuity that is better than 20/70 and
the child has one of these conditions- a
medically diagnosed progressive loss of vision, a
visual field of 20 degrees or worse, a medically
diagnosed condition of cortical blindness, or a
functional vision loss. - Hearing impaired (HI)- A hearing loss that has an
adverse affect on educational performance to the
extent specially designed instruction is
required- whether permanent or fluctuating,
ranging from mild to profound (a loss of 25
decibels or greater exists through speech
frequencies of 500, 1000, and 2000 Hertz in the
better ear), and of a degree that the child is
impaired in the processing of linguistic
information through hearing, with or without
amplification. - Mild mental disability (MMD)- A deficit or delay
in intellectual functioning (at least two but no
more than three standard deviations below the
mean) and adaptive behavior (at least two
standard deviations below the mean), which
adversely affects overall academic performance to
the extent that specially designed instruction is
required, and which typically manifests during
the developmental period. - Functional mental disability (FMD)- A deficit or
delay in intellectual functioning (at least three
or more standard deviations below the mean) and
adaptive behavior (at least three or more
standard deviations below the mean), which is
typically manifested during the developmental
period. A severe deficit exists in overall
academic performance and specially designed
instruction is required for the child to benefit
from education.
19More definitions
- Multiple disabilities- A combination of two or
more disabilities (e.g., mental
disability-blindness, mental disability-orthopedic
impairment, etc.) resulting in significant
learning, developmental, or behavioral and
emotional problems, which adversely affect
educational performance and cause severe
educational needs that cannot be accommodated in
special education programs solely for one of the
impairments. A child is not considered to have a
multiple disability if the adverse effect on
performance is solely the result of
deaf-blindness or the result of a speech language
disability and one other disability. - Autism- A developmental disability significantly
affecting verbal and nonverbal communication and
social interaction, generally evident before age
three that adversely affects a childs
educational performance. Other characteristics
often associated with autism are engagement in
repetitive activities and stereotyped movements,
resistance to environmental change or change in
daily routines, and unusual responses to sensory
experiences. The term does not apply if a childs
educational performance is adversely affected
because the child has an emotional behavioral
disability. - Deaf-blind- Combined hearing and visual
impairments that have an adverse affect on the
childs education performance, the combination of
which causes severe communication and other
developmental and educational needs that cannot
be accommodated in special education programs
solely for children with hearing or visual
impairments, unless supplementary assistance is
provided to address educational needs resulting
from the two disabilities. Specially designed
instruction is required to address needs of both
disabilities. - Traumatic brain injury (TBI)- An acquired injury
to the brain caused by an external physical
force, which adversely affects educational
performance and causes temporary or permanent and
partial or complete loss of cognitive
functioning, physical ability or communication or
social-behavioral interaction (e.g., memory,
reasoning, abstract thinking, judgment,
psychosocial behavior, speech, problem-solving,
etc.). The term does not mean a brain injury that
is congenital or degenerative, or brain injuries
induced by birth trauma.
20Multiple Intelligences
- The theory of multiple intelligences was
developed in 1983 by Dr. Howard Gardner,
professor of education at Harvard University. It
suggests that the traditional notion of
intelligence, based on I.Q. testing, is far too
limited. Instead, Dr. Gardner proposes eight
different intelligences to account for a broader
range of human potential in children and adults. - These intelligences are
- Linguistic intelligence ("word smart")
- Logical-mathematical intelligence
("number/reasoning smart") Spatial intelligence
("picture smart") - Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
- Musical intelligence ("music smart")
- Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
- Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
- Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
21Canary in coal mine
- Dr. Gardner says that our schools and culture
focus most of their attention on linguistic and
logical-mathematical intelligence. We esteem the
highly articulate or logical people of our
culture. - However, Dr. Gardner says that we should also
place equal attention on individuals who show
gifts in the other intelligences the artists,
architects, musicians, naturalists, designers,
dancers, therapists, entrepreneurs, and others
who enrich the world in which we live. - Unfortunately, many children who have these gifts
dont receive much reinforcement for them in
school. Many of these kids, in fact, end up being
labeled "learning disabled," "ADD (attention
deficit disorder," or simply underachievers, when
their unique ways of thinking and learning arent
addressed by a heavily linguistic or
logical-mathematical classroom. - The theory of multiple intelligences proposes a
major transformation in the way our schools are
run. It suggests that teachers be trained to
present their lessons in a wide variety of ways
using music, cooperative learning, art
activities, role play, multimedia, field trips,
inner reflection, and much more (see Multiple
Intelligences in the Classroom). - Source www.thomasarmstrong.com