building equity in education connecteach

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Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach www.connecteach.org

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Page 1: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Building Equity in Education

ConnecTeach

www.connecteach.org

Page 2: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

“Research on teaching in urban schools has suggested that, as a result of some teachers’ limited skills and the belief that their students are not capable of learning to a high level, many low-income and minority students receive a steady diet of low-level material, coupled with unstimulating, rote-oriented teaching. (Darling-Hammond, 2001).

Page 3: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

“Research has suggested that many teachers hold particularly low expectations of African American and Latino (substitute SC and ST) students, treat them more harshly than other students, and discourage their achievement.” (Carter and Goodwin, 1994)

Page 4: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Popular myths about teaching and teacher education

Teaching is mostly telling students what you know about your subject matter.

Teacher training is all about content delivery.

“Good” teacher education programs are impossible to construct.

Those who can, do. Those who can’t, teach.

Page 5: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Transformational ShiftsBricks to foundation

Outputs to outcomes

Attendance to engagement

Administrator as manager to administrator as role model

Teacher to educator

Page 6: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

From Teacher to EducatorThen

“ I will explain to students how to write the numbers.”

“ When I start, students are not able to connect to the lesson.”

“ How can I help my children with different strategies, [especially] those who are struggling?”

Now

“ Allow students to think and share ideas.” (Rani)

“I need to structure the lesson plan to grasp my student’s interest, not mine.” (Kalyani)

“ I have adapted the different ways of teaching to bring interest to the children… Giving students space and time to think.” (Divya)

Page 7: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Reform

Tell me and I’ll forget.

Show me and I may remember.

Involve me and I will understand.

Page 8: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Equity PedagogyTeaching strategies and classroom environments that help students from diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural groups attain the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to function effectively within, and create and perpetuate, a just, humane, and democratic society" (Banks, Theory into Practice).

Equity Pedagogy challenges the fundamental societal structures of inequity by equipping students with skills which will help them be facilitators for social change.

Page 9: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Quality Professional Development

Makes learning meaningful

Incorporates interactive teaching strategies

Ensures that students are engaged and attentive, self-motivated and involved in the learning process

Lessons and teaching are tailored to different learning styles

Ensures that teachers acquire skills to diagnose a student’s needs

Ensures that teachers develop the ability to put herself in her learner’s shoes- seeing beyond her own perspective

Page 10: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach
Page 11: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

You are a master teacher when

What you do is perfectly synchronized with who you are.

Page 12: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach

Contact Us:Bhavani Parpia

Founder and President

Email: [email protected]

Amy Merk

Program Director

Email: [email protected]

www.connecteach.org.

Page 13: Building Equity in Education ConnecTeach