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Teaching Children with Diverse Needs. Women Men African American Anglo American Asian American Hispanic American Native American. A person with a disability A person who is homeless. What stereotypes come to mind. Stereotyping.
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Women Men African American Anglo American Asian American Hispanic American Native American A person with a disability A person who is homeless What stereotypes come to mind
Stereotyping • Along with visual stereotyping sayings should also be discouraged in stereotyping-No way Jose’ and Indian giver
Children from Diverse Backgrounds • African American Children • Hispanic American Children • Asian American Children • Native American Children
African American Children (Bennett, 1995) • Feelings oriented and personal interactions • Nonverbal communication • Teaching strategies that stress cooperative learning rather than competition • Rich tradition of oral story telling and listening
Hispanic American Children (Garcia, 1992) • Family and ethnic loyalty • Interpersonal relationships • Parents and teachers are highly valued
Asian American Students (Feng, 1994) • Respect for authority and submergence of individual • Responsibility for relatives • View teachers as having high status • Respect for elders and deferred gratification
Native American Children (Banks, 1994) • Cultural preservation • Holistic and shared view of the world • Elders are highly respected and held in high esteem • Value sharing and cooperation • Learn through observation and patience
Other Key Factors • Development of language is closely connected to cognitive development • Learning in the first language helps a child gain knowledge more than attempting to learn the same knowledge in a language in which the child has little comprehension.
Recommendations • Recognize all children are cognitively, linguistically, and emotionally connected to the language and culture of their home • Acknowledge that children can demonstrate their knowledge and capabilities in many ways(diverse learning styles)
Instructional Practices of Culturally Response Teachers • Hold high expectations for all students • Achieve and maintain high levels of student involvement in learning tasks • Have a strong sense of self-efficacy • Create meaningful classroom activities built on students’ home cultural experiences
Before the school year starts • Access information about the community your school is in • Access basic information about school-population, test scores etc. • Get to know your families
During the School Year • Get to know the families • Review your student’s files for information regarding-name of primary caregiver, home language(s) spoken, special academic needs, possible ethnic background • Develop list of possible methods of communication for families (notes, person-to person, e-mail, telephone, fax etc) pages 126-127 letters)
Developing the Curriculum • Anti-basis curriculum-curriculum that challenges prejudice, stereotyping, bias, and the “isms.” • Bias- any attitude, belief, or feeling that results in, and helps to justify, unfair treatment of an individual because of his or her identity. • Multicultural curriculum-teach other’s culture so that they will learn to respect each other and not develop prejudice • Tourist curriculum-teach culture through celebrations and through artifacts such as food, traditional clothing and household implements Multicultural activities are separate from daily ongoing curriculum
Assumptions and Issues involving curriculum and diversity • Teacher assumes multicultural curriculum in needed only in a multicultural classroom • Multicultural curriculum is standardized and not addressing the unique needs and backgrounds of the students in the class • Multicultural Education may focus on the information about other countries and not issues related to Americans.
Recommendations (A.B.C. Task force; Derman-Sparks, 2000) • Dangers of tourist curriculum should be avoided instruction • Focus of Curriculum should incorporate all students particularly those in the classroom • All students should participate in cultural diversity in instruction
Creating an Positive Atmosphere in the Classroom • Images of children and adults of various ethnic groups should be in the classroom • Avoid tokenism-representation of only one or two of a certain ethnic group • A fair balance of men and women shown in the classroom doing a variety of jobs ( in the home and out of the home) • Images of persons of various ages and abilities in the classroom
Materials • Books,Dolls, manipulatives -reflect diversity in gender roles, ethnic and cultural backgrounds, abilities and range of occupations • Present accurate information and images • Variety of parents and family roles • Different languages, Braille, sign • Art should have various colors-tan, brown, black, and variety of artwork should be shown from various artists-ethnically diverse, women, men etc. • Various forms of music and song from diverse cultures should be included
Holidays and Curriculum • Issues- Halloween-Witches and Healer • Evil and the Color Black • Christmas, Easter,Chanukah, Kwanzaa, Winter Solstice • Approaches to instruction • Include holidays from several cultural groups • Do not celebrate holidays and allow children to share what the did for breaks and mention similarities and difference
More on Lesson Planning • Equity • Relationships for parents student and teacher • Knowledge of various cultures • See and think from a multicultural perspective • Correct distortions of historic and scientific record • Improve society • Willingness to cross ethnic and cultural boundaries
Terms • Lesson plan- a plan of instruction for a single lesson • Instructional objective • Materials • Methods • Evaluation • Time • Origin
Ways to incorporate diversity into instruction • Lesson sequence- series of individual lessons( one lesson builds on another) • Instructional activity-integrated part of the lesson or an activity that can be the lesson itself (field trip; oral presentations, class meetings, programs) • Unit of instruction-comprehensive, multidimensional plan of learning