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The Principles of Culturally Responsive Teaching &
Culturally Responsive SchoolEnvironments
Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz, Ph.DNew York University
Metropolitan Center for Urban Education
New York Higher Education Support Center (HESC) for
SystemsChangeFall 2006 Statewide MeetingCrowne Plaza – Albany – NY
September, 15, 2006
(Adapted from original for use with district professional learning on 4.7.14)
Workshop Objectives:
To learn (some) principles of Culturally Responsive Teaching (CRT) as defined by Gloria Ladson-Billings and Geneva Gay
To learn some principles of Culturally Responsive Environments (CRE)
To discuss the implications of CRT & CRE for our schools
Definitions for our Workshop
Culture
Pedagogy
Culturally Responsive Teaching
A Definition for Culture
Culture is the shared perceptions of a group’s values, expectations and norms. It reflects the way people give priorities to goals, how they behave in different situations, and how they cope with their world and with one another. People experience their social environment through their culture.
Culture is transmitted from generation to generation.
A Definition for Pedagogy
The philosophical framework for our teaching.
The lens in which we plan, carry out and reflect on our teaching.
The art and science of teaching.
What isCulturally Responsive
Teaching?
According to scholar Gloria Ladson Billings, Culturally Responsive Teaching (CRT) is:
An approach that empowers students intellectually, socially, emotionally, and politically by using cultural referents to impact knowledge, skills and attitudes.
Culturally Responsive Teaching
Builds on what students already know.
Helps students understand there is more than one way of knowing.
Encourages students to embrace their culture and develop a love of learning.
Highlights students’ strengths, and gives them confidence to confront their weaknesses.
Culturally Responsive Teaching
Gives Teachers…
The opportunity to learn about students’ cultures.
The opportunity to teach students about the behaviors valued in schools.
Ways to keep their teaching exciting -- they vary teaching approaches based on their learners.
“In our multicultural society, culturally responsive teaching reflects democracy at its highest level. It means doing whatever it takes to ensure that every child is achieving and ever moving toward realizing their potential.”
--Joyce Taylor-Gibson
Be willing to reexamine your teaching pedagogy and make it relevant to your students.
Be someone who deeply cares about your students.
Be a student-centered teacher, which means taking an interest in your students’ community and making positive contact with their parents.
Be willing to learn about cultures other than your own.
To Be A Teacher of CRT, You Need To:
What are some of the cultures and languages
represented in your schools and classrooms?
What some of the cultures and languages your
students will encounter in their educational
settings?
What Are the Characteristics of a Culturally Responsive
School Environment?
Culturally Responsive School Environments:
Use the culture and experiences of Latino, African American, Asian American, Native American, and White Americans not part of mainstream culture as a scaffold to learning (Gay, 2004).
Use instruction that involves matching the knowledge of particular groups with the learning environment.
Embraces a strength-based perspective.
Knows that failure of any children is not an option.
Creates an environment that reflects cultural and linguistic diversity.
Enacts instruction through different learning styles.
Building a Culturally Responsive Environment requires…
Dialogues on race/ethnicity and culture
Caring (Noddings, 1986; Valenzuela, 1999)
Analyzing school climate – who feels comfortable and safe? Who feels uncomfortable and unsafe?
Continuously analyzing student achievement data
Professional Development on learning styles
Why is a Culturally Responsive Environment Important in Educational Settings?
Schooling process operates on cultural nuances (e.g., agriculture calendar, giving teacher an apple, speaking up in class, calling teacher by last name).
Culture of “others” has historically not been acknowledged in the schooling process and resulted in differential outcomes (Banks, 1987, 2001; Delpit, 1993; Sleeter, 1987).
A Place to Begin…
Get to know the research
Be honest about where you are as a school or organization
Let the research inform your decision-making process
Implement realistic (time-bound, measurable goals)
Follow-up and follow through with professional development and periodic assessment
Discussion
What are the implications for your school or organization to create a culturally responsive school environment?
Obstacles?Challenges?Benefits?
“The increasing diversity in our schools, the ongoing demographic changes across the nation and the movement toward globalization dictate that we develop a more in-depth understanding of culture if we want to bring about true understanding among diverse populations.”
-Maria Wilson-Portunando
References
Banks, J. A. (1987, 2001) Educating Citizens in a Multicultural Society. New York: Teachers College Press.
Delpit, L. (1993). The Silenced Dialogue: Power and Pedagogy in Educating Other People's Children" in Beyond Silenced Voices: Class, Race, and Gender in United States Schools (L.Weis, M.Fine, eds).
Gay, G. (2000). Culturally Responsive Teaching : Theory, Research, and Practice (Multicultural Education Series, No. 8). New York: Teachers College Press.
Grant, C. A., & Sleeter, C. E. (1987). Who determines teacher work? The debate continues. Teaching & Teacher Education, 3(1), 61-64.
Ladson-Billings, G. (1995). The Dreamkeepers : Successful Teachers of African American Children. San Francisco: Jossey Bass.
Noddings, N. (1986). Caring - a Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education. USA: University of California Press.
Valenzuela, A. (1999). Subtractive Schooling: U.S.-Mexican youth and the politics of caring. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.