Cultural Competence
Culturally Responsive
Teachers must engage in an ongoing process
Understanding that culture has a role in education
Actively learning about students' cultures and communities
Learning about the beliefs and values of a variety of cultures, whether or not those cultures are represented in the class
Broadening their awareness and gaining insight into issues facing diverse students, families, and communities
Teachers must practice ongoing reflection
What are my own thoughts, values and behaviors about culture?
I believe I have left this largely unexamined. What are my cultural beliefs about the role of the school, the teacher, the student, and classroom norms? Are my views Americanized? Asian-centric? European-centric?
"If you don't think about diversity in the classroom then you are shortchanging the students, and you're not looking at how they learn best." Pre-service teacher (IRIS center module p. 2)
Classroom practices
How does race and cultural background influence my teaching?
What is the race or cultural background of those students with whom I have difficulty relating?
Provide curriculum content to students in a way that is validating and meaningful
What messages do I send to the class about race and culture?
I occasionally engage in discussions with students, but these are anecdotal and unplanned. I should put thought into consciously and consistently incorporating cultural awareness into everyday learning.
Do I treat all students with respect?
Teach students to respect their own and others' cultural identitites and differences
Do I value the experiences my students bring to the classroom?
Make connections between background knowledge and content standards
Do I have prejudicial thoughts or allow prejudice to direct my actions in the classroom?
Communication
Teachers should familiarize themselves with students' styles of communication and the cultural influences which may be behind differences
dramatic presentation
conversational and active participatory discourse
gestures and body movement
rapidly paced rhythmic speech
metaphorical imagery
Consider cultural differences in student participation. Some students actively engage while others remain silent. (Donna Ford, PhD, IRIS center module, p. 4)
I have given such differences consideration with individual personality differences, but gave little thought to cultural differences.
Consider a student who repeatedly interrupts. This may not be a result of disrespectful behavior, but culturally appropriate engagement in discussion. (Donna Ford, PhD, IRIS center module, p. 4)
Promoting Family Involvement
Cultural and linguistic differences can play a big part in whether or not families become involved in their child's schooling
language differences
learn basic words and phrases in the families' first language
utilize interpreters
varied family compositions
learn the family composition and who to contact regarding school issues
I acknowledge varied family compositions habitually. When instructing students to take something home to their parents, I typically use the long winded phrase "mom/dad/grandma/grandpa/auntie/uncle...whichever adult is at home" to recognize and normalize varied family compositions
culturally based perceptions about school involvement
support may be demonstrated in different ways
family members may view teachers as experts and as such are uncomfortable questioning them
anxiety about residency
build trust and make the family feel safe
Linguistic Supports
manipulatives
word walls
real objects, pictures, or graphics
cooperative learning
building on background knowledge
reading aloud interactively
labels
technology
Language Acquisition
Basic Interpersonal Communicative Skills (BICS)
ability to understand basic conversational English, or social language
generally acquired in approximately 2 years
adequate for early educational experiences but are "inadequate for the linguistic demands of upper elementary school and beyond" (IRIS center module, p. 5)
Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency (CALP)
also "academic language", where students can effectively understand and communicate more advanced and complex language
typically acquired in 5 to 7 years
Students struggle significantly with academic concepts in the classroom while they are working to acquire CALP
Lack of awareness can lead teachers to misinterpret the fluency of students and, as a result, to have inaccurate assumptions about a student's ability
low expectations for students
instruction that lacks appropriate scaffolds and supports
inappropriate referrals to special education
Many educators, myself included, are unprepared to meet the needs of English Learner students