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Culturally-Responsive Classroom Management & Organization. Elise Trumbull California State University, Northridge. Overview of Session. Classroom management and organization as part of culturally-responsive pedagogy Equity issues related to management and organization
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Culturally-Responsive Classroom Management & Organization Elise Trumbull California State University, Northridge
Overview of Session • Classroom management and organization as part of culturally-responsive pedagogy • Equity issues related to management and organization • Using a cultural framework to understand differences • Crafting management and organization strategies that are culturally-responsive
Definitions • Classroom Management: the set of strategies used to ensure a productive, harmonious learning environment • Classroom Organization: the ways teachers structure time, space, and classroom interactions to promote learning
Definitions continued… • Discipline: any action taken by the teacher to directly control student behavior • Punishment: a form of discipline entailing either withdrawing a privilege or subjecting the student to unpleasant consequences • Culture: the shared values, beliefs, and ways of knowing and living of a group
Casting a Broad Net • “Classroom management … involves planning, facilitating, and monitoring experiences that are conducive to high levels of learning ... It also entails creating … classroom environments that are personally comfortable, racially and ethnically inclusive, and intellectually stimulating.” Geneva Gay, 2006, p. 343
Management and Organization: Part of Culturally-Responsive Pedagogy
Culturally-responsive pedagogy: Instructional practice… designed with learners’ cultural values, knowledge, and ways of learning taken into account and that empowers students to succeed… Trumbull & Pacheco, 2005, Vol.I, p. 85
Equity Concerns • “[M]uch of the current high levels of racial disproportionality in school discipline is a reflection of teachers not understanding and incorporating the cultural values, orientations, and experiences of African, Latino, Asian, and Native Americans into curriculum and instruction.” Geneva Gay, 2006, p. 343
Cultural Competence • Teachers’ cultural knowledge is essential also to the development of caring relationships and the interpersonal skills to interact with not only students but also their families. Weinstein, 2003
When a Visitor Comes… • Mrs. Hernandez is in the middle of alphabet review with her 18 kindergarten-first-grade students seated on the rug in front of her. She has to leave the group for several minutes at a time to talk with with Mr. Sanchez, a parent volunteer who is building some shelving for the classroom. • What can she do to keep the children appropriately busy?
Proverbs reflect cultural values. • Stand on your own two feet. • The early bird gets the worm. • None of us is as smart as all of us. • The nail that stands out gets pounded down. • God helps those who help themselves. • Many hands make light work.
Individualistic Classroom= a group of individuals with individual needs who learn individually Individual responsibility, individual materials, prescribed helping Developmental goal: independence Collectivistic Classroom= a group who can benefit from each other and jointly learn Group responsibility, shared materials, automatic helping Developmental goal: interdependence Two Different Orientations
Cautions about Generalizations • Framework only a starting point for raising questions • All cultures are both I and C– just different emphases • Individuals vary • Many people multi-ethnic/multi-racial • Cultures change
The Bridging Cultures Project • Seven teachers– who became researchers • Four researchers @ three institutions • Latino students in Los Angeles area • Individualism-Collectivism Framework
When is helping cheating? • A student reads workbook directions for another student. • A student helps his friend with a math problem in class. • A student whispers an answer to another student in response to a teacher’s question. • Three students work on homework together. • One student shares her homework with another. • Four students work together on a standardized practice test. • One student whispers an answer to another during a written spelling test.
When is sharing okay? When is it borrowing?… stealing? • A student takes a pencil from a friend’s desk without asking. • A student gives her pencil to a friend. Now she has none. • A student takes a book home from the classroom without asking. • A student wears his brother’s shirt to school without asking. • A mother eats part of her child’s school breakfast without asking.
Capitalizing on Students’ Cultural Strengths: BC Examples • Students help each other and the teacher. • Students teach each other. • Students manage the classroom when the teacher cannot. • Students share jobs. • Students share classroom property and space. • Students help absent peers.
Classroom as Family • Orientation of helping, sharing, group success…… • Cited as positive for both African American and Latino students • Builds on what students know from home • Makes sense to parents
Mrs. Pérez’s Pledge to the World • I pledge allegiance to the world,To cherish every living thing,To care for earth and sea and air,With peace and freedom everywhere.
Organization and Culture • Desks and tables • Bulletin boards • Materials • Social relationships • Home-school connections
A Goal: Classroom Orchestration • structuring classroom interactions and activities in ways that harmonize values of home and school and draw on students’ cultural resources to resolve problems, avoid conflicts, and minimize the need for discipline Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull (in press).
References Evertson, C. M., & Weinstein, C. S. (2006).Classroom management as a field of inquiry. In C. M. Evertson & C. S. Weinstein(Eds.). Handbook of classroom management: Research, practice, and contemporary issues (pp. 3-15). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Gay, G. (2006). Connections between classroom management and culturally responsive teaching. In C. M. Evertson & C. S. Weinstein (Eds.), Handbook of classroom management: Research, practice, and contemporary issues (pp. 343-370. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Ladson-Billings, G. (1994). The dreamkeepers: Successful teachers of AfricanAmerican children. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull (in press). Reconceptualizing Classroom Management: Building on Students’ Cultural Strengths. Alexandria, VA: ASCD. Trumbull, E., & Pacheco, M. (2005). The teacher’s guide to diversity: Building a knowledge base. Vol. I, Human development, culture, and cognition. Providence: Brown University. Trumbull, E., Rothstein-Fisch, C., Greenfield, P. M., & Quiroz, B. (2001). Bridging cultures between home and school: A guide for teachers. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.