culturally responsive pedagogy

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Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

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Culturally Responsive Pedagogy. The Body Ritual of the Nacerima. What are the significant aspects of the culture of the Nacerima? How might we consider the culture of our students in the classroom? What sorts of considerations might we have to make if we gained a child from Naceriman culture? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Page 2: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

The Body Ritual of the Nacerima

• What are the significant aspects of the culture of the Nacerima?

• How might we consider the culture of our students in the classroom?• What sorts of considerations might we

have to make if we gained a child from Naceriman culture?

• REALLY???

• How do we shape our instruction based on misconceptions or stereotypes? How can we overcome this?

Page 3: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Culturally Responsive Teaching• Respond to this quote in your K-W-L• “Most white children have spent their

academic lives looking into distorted mirrors of their history and culture which only reflected people like themselves: while most children of color have pointed toward a narrow window, which offered an obstructed view of the world and their place in it.”

• -Mizell, Bennett, Bisse-Bowman, & Morin

Page 4: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Your Classroom of 30 Students•19 white•17 from two parent home•15 will live in single-parent family at some point•12 never complete college•10 born to unmarried parents

•10 poor at some point•10 a year or behind in school•8 live with only one parent•6 born poor•6 born to mother without hs diploma•6 Hispanic•6 receive food stamps

Page 5: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Your Classroom, continued•6 with foreign born mother•5 are poor today•5 African American•4 no health insurance•4 from working poor•4 born to teenage mother•4 will never graduate from hs•1 might be Native American

•3 might be gay or bi-sexual•3 disabled•2 at less than half poverty level•2 struggle speaking English•1 Asian-American•Several biracial or bicultural•Every 35 classrooms: 1 student killed by gunfire before 20

Page 6: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Key Terms• Culture

• Way of life common to group of people; includes knowledge deemed important, shared meanings, norms, values, attitudes, ideals, and view of the world

• Ethnic Group• Inviduals within larger culture who

share a racial or cultural identity and a set of beliefs, values, and attitudes and who consider themselves members of a distinct group or subculture

Page 7: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Key Terms• Race

•Used to distinguish people on the basis of biological traits and characteristics

• Minorities•Groups of people who share certain

characteristics and are smaller in number than the majority of the population

Page 8: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Stereotypes• Positive and Negative Stereotypes

• Lead to false assumptions about the ability levels of certain students

• Positive stereotypes• ‘Billy, you’re Korean. There’s no reason

that you can’t do the work!’

• Negative stereotypes• ‘Hannah, you need to act less hysterical

when you get an answer wrong. Act like a man, not a girl!’

Page 9: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Why don’t kids learn?• 3 theories explain why students fail

to learn•Deficit theory•Expectation theory•Cultural difference theory

Page 10: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Deficit Theory• Some students lag because:

•Values, language patterns, behaviors learned at home don’t mesh with culture of U.S. schools

•Not familiar with ‘language of power’•Affects student ability to process information and maintain pace with peers

Page 11: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Expectation Theory•Students of certain ethnic or

racial groups fail to learn because teachers EXPECT them to fail to learn!!!•Self-fulfilling cycle

Page 12: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Cultural Difference Theory•Academic Problems can be

overcome if teachers bridge the gap separating schools and home•Recognize, use cultural traditions and practices to reach students

Page 13: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Who cares?• Why is it important for students to

see their reflection in the curriculum: to see themselves and their ancestors and their cultures represented in pages of the curriculum?• Not just to feel good but because their

ancestors really did play integral roles in the history of this country

• Promotes meaningful learning• Familiarity to students

Page 14: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Realistic?• Can we really

• Represent all persons equally?• Represent all points of view?• Build a curriculum that is honest and

based on current scholarship yet promotes good citizenship and attitudes of civic participation?

• Have a curriculum that raises controversial issues yet enables students to become analytical and thoughtful?

Page 15: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Maybe not, but we can try to constantly address these issues through asking…

What materials, instructional examples and content will I

use to achieve learning goals?

• Resource: Culturally Responsive Teaching: Lesson Planning for Elementary and Middle Grades by J. Irvine & B. Armento

Page 16: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Four Constant Curricular Principles

•Inclusiveness•Alternative Perspectives•Commonalities as well as diversity

•Student-constructed examples

Page 17: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Inclusiveness•Child’s voice and heritage should be heard•Authentic cultural data, literature, music, art, artifacts, primary source materials and cultural history used in curriculum to represent range of relevant persons and groups that should be included in the study•Inclusive, rich and varied array

Question is NOT: Who is my class this year and how can I represent them in the curriculum? (limited view of inclusion)Question IS: During the time period/issue/event/genre/scientific theme we are studying, who is relevant and should be included in the study

Teachers will need to do research to answer this question and students should be a part of this process. By including students, you are keeping true to the idea that students are inquirers with the teacher, and any one source will not usually provide all necessary information.

Page 18: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Alternative Perspectives• Why?

• To see issues from a range of perspectives• Reach a consensus• Have more tolerance for those with differing

views• New facts/issues arise• Topic takes on new complexity

• (example, “westward expansion”, “slavery”, “unions” from view of N. Americans, Af. Americans, working class)

• Gives a more complete view of the whole• Challenged to address conflicting

interpretations

Page 19: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Commonalties as Well as Diversity!• Stress both• Recognize bonds that unite all humans

• Common values of society• Principles of justice, equity, value of the individual,

importance of democratic ideals• Full range of human diversity should be

recognized• The factor that makes each person unique and

interesting• Identifying with groups

• Provides pride, self-esteem, self-knowledge and identity• Doesn’t have to conflict with respect for others’

groups• Do not over generalize about members of any

group• Ethnic, gender, cultural, religious-may not all hold

similar beliefs, values, or patterns of behavior as others in the group.

Page 20: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Student Constructed Examples

•Concrete representations, images, metaphors, examples and graphic organizers

•Generated by students and teachers to give meaning and depth to task

Page 21: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Classroom Strategies• Avoid segregated classrooms

• ‘boys vs. girls’• Prevent ‘self-segregation’

• Mobility• Move around the room to stay ‘in touch’

with all students

• Cooperative Education• Collaborative groups can helps some

students• ALWAYS MONITOR!

Page 22: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Classroom Strategies• Displays

• Avoid over- or under-representation of specific groups or gender

• Eye contact• Not all students are comfortable with it!

• Be aware of personal space and student cultural perspectives about being touched

• Build a relationship with family

Page 23: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Classroom Strategies• Avoid calling on the first student

with a response!• Be aware of wait time!• Assign tasks randomly rather than

relying on specific students• Avoid unequal punishment

• Boys tend to be punished more than girls

Page 24: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Culture and You•For 10 minutes, think of at least 10 different things that might be considered as part of YOUR culture. This might include

•Foods•Sports•Ethnicity•Religion•Heroes

•Family relationships•Race•Nationality•Regional ties•Dialect•Class/wealth•Local ties•Family education level

Page 25: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

• How might your own cultural background impact your teaching?• Strengths?• Weaknesses?

• How can teachers work to move beyond their own cultural background?• HOW CAN WE KNOW OUR STUDENTS?

• How do we shape lessons to incorporate cultural differences?

Page 26: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Critical Autobiography• Who you are and what you know influence

what you teach• If we have different experiences, cultural

backgrounds, or races from our students – we have difficulty meeting their needs – a cultural mismatch. We may misinterpret their behavior as misbehavior or leave their experiences out of the curriculum. When planning lessons-especially in social studies-we must reflect on how we can take student experiences and cultures into account.

• Due on October 24th

Page 27: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

For Next Time…

• Read Lies My Teacher Told Me Chapters 1-4

• Cultural Autobiography Due• Be prepared to participate in a

Literature Circle.