Title: Culturally Responsive Practices in Early Childhood
1Culturally Responsive Practices in Early Childhood
- Seena M. Skelton, Ph.D. Karen R. Schaeffer,
Ph.D. - Consultants Supporting Communities, Schools, and
Families
2Agenda
- A vision of high achievement for all children
- The influence of culture and the impact of
cultural diversity in early childhood settings - The hidden rules and cultural mismatches
- Promoting success for culturally and
linguistically diverse (CLD) children through
culturally responsive educational settings.
3Why is there a need for culturally responsive
practices?
- Increase of culturally diverse children and
families in U.S. - Hidden rules and cultural differences
- Different knowledge children bring to educational
settings - Educators uncertainty of how to best support
children and families from cultures different
than their own - Language and communication differences of some
families and school personnel - Achievement gap
4Culturally Diverse Students are
- Less likely to have their
- academic and social needs met
- cultural experience and background validated
- cultural qualities respected or affirmed
- Unless.
5We Value Diversity
- To live joyful interesting lives and to be at
peace with each other, people must appreciate
each others differences as well as their
similarities. Children are learning to do this
today in family day care, their own homes, and
everywhere they go. - Marilyn Lopez, University of Mass.
6We know that
- Students will succeed in schools where they
feel positive about their own culture and the
culture of others. - Cummins 1986
7Hidden Rules
Unspoken cues, habits, and standards for behavior
of a group. Hidden rules exist between and
among various groups including, economic classes,
ethnic groups, families, communities, and
organizations.
8Cultural Mismatch and Hidden Rules
Students Culture Ethnicity SES Family/Community
Norms
School Culture White Middle Class Mainstream Norms
These hidden rules affect behavioral expectations
and communication styles. Sometimes there is a
conflict.
9Differing Funds of Knowledge
- Different preparation. Not lack of preparation.
- Oral tradition vs. Written tradition
- Improvisation vs. standardization
- Multi-tasking vs. single task activity
completion
- Communication
- direct vs. indirect commands
- authentic vs. inauthentic questions
- high vs. low context
- native language vs. English only
10Developing Cultural Competence is a Process
Awareness
Knowledge
Skill
11A Process for Developing Cultural Competency
- An important aspect of cross cultural
competence is not so much what we learn about
other people, but what we learn about ourselves
and our reactions to other people. - Dr. Ray Terrell,
- Miami University
12The 3 Rs of Culturally Responsive Education
- Respect
- Responsive
- Relevance
13The Keys to Supporting Culturally Diverse Families
- Awareness
- Information
- Access
14Culturally Diverse Families
- may be unaware if the availability of early
intervention programs,preschools or Head Start
Services - who do not speak English fluently face restricted
access to materials disseminated by child find
agencies.
15 Agencies Can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Providing public awareness of early intervention
services in the native language - Involving community members in planning child
find programs, in identifying, and referring
families to seek services - Recruiting and preparing professionals from the
diverse cultural groups
16Home Care Providers can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Seeing cultural differences including language
differences as a resource and not a deficit. - Encouraging the development and use of the native
language of young children in their homes. - Building upon childrens diverse gifts and skills
and provide young children varied opportunities
to exhibit these skills.
17Home Care Providers can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Understanding the difference between basic
interpersonal communication skills and language
proficiency when learning a new language. - Actively involving parents and overtly
demonstrate a respect and value of the home
culture. - Incorporating multicultural and non-biased
instruction, materials, toys in daily activities.
18Home Care Providers can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Validating and affirming childrens language and
cultural background - Provide children opportunities to hear and use
their home language within the EC setting. - Incorporate the use of childrens home language
(s) throughout the learning environment. - Use selected words and phrases of childrens home
language.
19Home Care Providers can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Providing explicit instruction of pre-academic
and behavior expectations - Addressing bias and stereotyping
- Providing clear, consistent, and frequent
feedback to children about expectations and
performance standards
20Home Care Providers can Demonstrate the 3 Rs by
- Collaborate with parents and community members
to guide developmentally appropriate and
culturally responsive activities.
21Main Points
- Envision high achievement for all children
- Understand culture and the impact of cultural
diversity in early childhood settings - Make hidden rules visible
- Provide culturally responsive activities
environments to promote success