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Session Purposes:. Engage in conversations and activities about the impact and influence of race, culture, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation, socioeconomics, and class on educational practiceIntroduce the tools for culturally proficient leadership. In honor of:. Terry Cross. Note of Appreciation:.
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1. Culturally Proficient Practice York Region District School Board
School Leaders
Randall B. Lindsey
April 2007
2. Session Purposes:
Engage in conversations and activities about the impact and influence of race, culture, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation, socioeconomics, and class on educational practice
Introduce the tools for culturally proficient leadership
This is a test!This is a test!
3. In honor of: Terry Cross
4. Note of Appreciation: Tools for Tolerance Program, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Los Angeles
Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center, Toronto
5. We Raymond Terrell
Kikanza Nuri Robins
Delores B. Lindsey
Brenda CampbellJones
Franklin CampbellJones
Laraine Roberts
Richard M. Martinez
Stephanie Graham
R. Chris Westphal, Jr.
Cynthia Jew
6. Cultural Proficiency Is an inside-out approach
Is about being aware of how we work with others
Is about being aware of how we react to those different from us
7. Cultural Proficiency is A mind set; a way of being; a paradigm shift for some
The use of specific tools for effectively describing, responding to, and planning for issues that emerge in diverse environments
Policies and practices at the organizational level, and values and behaviors of the leader that enable effective cross cultural interactions among students, teachers, administrators, and community
8. Cultural Perceptions Engage in the activity:
Select a partner that you do not know well.
A and B?
A shares her perceptions about B (next slide)
B responds to those perceptions
B shares his perceptions about A
A responds to those perceptions
9. Share your perceptions:How do you think your partner would respond? Country of family origin and heritage
Languages spoken
Interests or hobbies
Favorite foods
Preferred types of movies, tv programs
Preferred types of music
Pets, if any, or favorite animals
10. Tools of Cultural Proficiency Guiding Principles - Underlying values of the approach
Continuum - Language for describing both healthy and non-productive policies, practices and individual behaviors
Essential Elements - Five behavioral standards for measuring, and planning for, growth toward cultural proficiency
Barriers - Three caveats that assist in responding effectively to resistance to change
11. The Guiding Principles Culture is a predominant force
People are served in varying degrees by the dominant culture
Acknowledge group identities
Diversity within cultures is important
Respect unique cultural needs
The Guiding Principles are the core values, the foundation upon which the approach is built
12. York Region District School Board Statement of Mission
We unite in our purpose to inspire and prepare learners for life in our changing world community.
13. York Region District School Board Vision We are the faces of public education.We understand our gifts and challenges. We are motivated by our dreams and act towards their fulfillment. We respect and celebrate our differences. We invite and value the spirit of community, creativity, and personal growth. We support each other. We have joy in who we are and who we are becoming.
14. York Region District School Board Values We recognize and celebrate excellence, and the heart-felt efforts and contributions of our community.
We strive for equity, inclusiveness, and diversity in all our programs, practices, facilities,and people.
We value dedication and commitment.
We value and will respond in an appropriate manner to the voices, ideas, and understanding of all our community members.
We believe it is the right and responsibility of everyone to ensure a safe nurturing community.
We embrace the spirit of innovation that acts to realize opportunities to transform our vision into reality.
We are all responsible for our words and actions.
15. The Continuum Cultural destructiveness
Cultural incapacity
Cultural blindness
Cultural pre-competence
Cultural competence
Cultural proficiency
There are six points along the cultural proficiency continuum that indicate unique ways of perceiving and responding to differences.
16. Examples Along the Continuum View the Continuum in its two parts and discuss pertinent examples from your school experiences:
Destructiveness, Incapacity & Blindness
Precompetence, Competence & Proficiency
17. Words often used to describe some groups and implied terms for others: Inferior
Culturally deprived
Culturally disadvantaged
Deficient
Different
Diverse
Third world
Minority
Underclass
Poor
Unskilled workers Superior
Privileged
Advantaged
Normal
Similar
Uniform
First world
Majority
Upper class
Middle class
Leaders
18. Downward Spiral Conversation
Proficiency
19. Essential Elements for Leadership Action:
Assess Culture
Value Diversity
Manage the Dynamics of Difference
Adapt to Diversity
Institutionalize Cultural Knowledge
The Essential Elements of cultural proficiency provide the standards for individual behavior and organizational practices
20. The Power of Context - The Tipping Point
21. Cultural Proficiency helps us to move FROM TOLERANCE FOR DIVERSITY TO TRANSFORMATION FOR EQUITY Destructiveness - Blindness Precompetence - Proficiency Focus on them and their inadequacies
Tolerate, assimilate, acculturate
Demographics viewed as challenge
Prevent, mitigate, avoid cultural dissonance and conflict
Stakeholders expect or help others to assimilate
Information added to existing policies, procedures, practices.
The focus on us and our practices
Esteem, respect, adapt
Demographics inform policy and practice
Manage, leverage, facilitate conflict
Stakeholders adapt to meet needs of others
Information integrated into
policies, procedures, practices.
22. Leverage Points for Creating Change Assessment & Accountability
Curriculum & Instruction
Parent and Community Communication & Outreach
Professional Development
23. The Barriers
The presumption of entitlement
Systems of oppression
Unawareness of the need to adapt
The barriers to cultural proficiency are systemic privilege, oppression, and resistance to change
24. Education in and for Democracy The best case for public education has always been that it is a common good.
As the main institution for fostering social cohesion in an increasingly diverse society, publicly funded schools must serve all children, not simply those with the loudest or most powerful advocates. This means addressing the cognitive and social needs of all children, with an emphasis on including those who may not have been well served in the past.
Michael Fullan, The Moral Imperative of School Leadership
25. The Moral Imperative . . . , listening . . . requires not only open eyes and ears, but open hearts and minds. We do not really see through our eyes or hear through our ears, but through our beliefs. . . . It is not easy, but it is the only way to learn what it might feel like to be someone else and the only way to start the dialogue.
- Lisa Delpit
26. A Culturally Proficient Vision Equity will be a reality when children from minority racial, cultural, socio-economic, and linguistic backgrounds experience statistically similar rates of meeting high standards as do children from the majority culture.
Bay Area Educational Equity Task Force