Title: Highly Qualified & Culturally Competent
1Highly Qualified Culturally Competent
- Is It Too Much To Expect of Public School
Teachers?
Dr. Rodney Davis
Troy University
2Purpose
- Explore Cultural Competence
- Inform so we can lead others
- Create a dialogue between educators
- Initiate change
3Outline
- Introduction
- Highly Qualified vs. Effective Teacher
- Activity 1 Recipe for Effective Teaching
- Diversity Brings New Challenges
- Activity 2 I Am From Poems
- Is There a Doctor in the House?
- Cultural Competence Defined
- Do We Need to be Culturally Competent?
- How do we Pursue Cultural Competence?
4Introduction
- NCLB Profoundly Impacted Education
- Changed what is taught
- Who teaches it
- How its taught
- How we assess what is taught
- Depending on your perspective
- The government is intruding into a States right
- The government is taking direct action to improve
schools - If successful, NCLB will change the face of
education for the next 50 years!
5Four Guiding Principles
- Stronger accountability for results
- Teeth in the legislation
- Increased flexibility and local control
- Funding comes in state level activity grants
- Expanded options for parents
- Increased voice in school choice
- Substantive role in volunteerism
- Emphasis on teaching methods that have been
proven to work - Scientifically based research
6Tragically, over the last seven and a half years
of the Clinton-Gore Administration, our nation
has experienced an education recessiona decline
and stagnation in student achievement. Too many
schools are not teaching our children basic
skills, such as reading and writing. Too many
schools are plagued by violence and disorder that
hinder learning and development. And children who
want to excel in subjects like math and science
are not given enough opportunities to realize
their potential. George W. Bush
7Teacher Quality
- Concern, Too many classrooms are being led by
professionals who lack qualifications. - Most often, educators who are teaching out of
field - Research has shown that next to the parent,
teachers are directly responsible for student
achievement. - Rod Paige asserted that a teachers general
cognitive ability combined with experience
content knowledge linked to teaching
effectiveness. - NCLB Goal Highly Qualified Teacher in Every
Classroom by end of 05/06 School year.
8Highly Qualified Defined
- Hold at least a bachelors degree from a four
year institution (degree must require an academic
major in a field math vs. math education) - Hold full state certification
- Demonstrate subject competence as measured by
some type of exam.
9HQT Definitions Suggests
- Degree
- Certification
- Content Knowledge
?
Student Achievement
Teacher
?
Focus is on Inputs
10What HQT Doesnt Say
- Doesnt say anything about effective teaching.
- Goal of education is learning not just
achievement. - We all may know someone who meets the definition
of HQT but is ineffective in the classroom - We also may know someone who does not meet it and
is still effective. - No connection between credentials and creating
learning environments - Doesnt address the need for educators to be
prepared and willing to use culture to create a
positive learning environment.
What does an effective teacher look like?
11Is HQT Enough?
- Given the growing diversity of Americas
public school students and the demands that all
students meet AYP adequate yearly progress
there is substantial evidence that teachers need
more than context knowledge to be effective. - Berry, 2004
12Activity 1 Recipe for Effective Teaching
Your Turn
13Diversity Brings New Challenges
- Harold Hodgkinson predicts by the year 2050
elementary and secondary classrooms will be
composed of 51 ethnic and racial minority
students. - Flowers predicts that current minority
populations will be the majority in as little as
20 years.
14Where are we Diverse Now?
Source 2000 US Census
15What about in 25 years?
South Southwest West
16What is the Classroom Impact of Increased
Diversity?
- Acceptance that the homogeneous classroom is a
relic of the past. - Faculty must reflect diversity.
- Preparation programs must be modified to help
pre-service teachers to be prepared to work with
diverse populations. - Curriculum must be written to not only pay lip
service to diversity awareness but to
wholeheartedly incorporate it. - Teaching practices must change.
- Realization that culture impacts learning.
17Traditional Teaching Model
18Cultures Impact on Learning
- Culture is
- Reference framework that helps us to interpret
our world. (Surbone, 2004) - Set of learned beliefs and behaviors that control
how members of the group view the world. (Robbins
in McClean, 2004) - Culture is a lens through which the individual
views the world which can enhance or impede the
learning process.
Communication
19Cultural Barriers May Distort The Message
Lunch!!!!
Please Dont call On me!!
Pi squared? Pi are round! Cornbread are square!
Culture
20Tried and True Methodologies
Tried and true methodologies that were successful
in years gone by may not meet the needs of a
multi-ethnic, multi-racial, multi- lingual, and
multi-cultural classroom the next generation of
teachers will stand before.
21Activity 2 How are we diverse?
- Places
- Products
- Food
- People
- Common Things
- Pictures
- Events
- Phrases
- Smells
- Sounds
- Sights
- ouches
Your Turn
I am From. . .
22I Am From Reflections
- What similarities and differences among the
members of your small group did you notice in
your discussion of the I Am From poem? - What did you learn about race and culture from
this activity? - How do the different elements in your personal
culture and I Am From inform/influence/motivate
the work you do how you do it and why you do it?
23Is There A Doctor in the House?
- Cultural Competence is a relatively new term for
educators. - Not much written about it.
- One will find 1365 medical psychological
journal articles on this topic. - Articles span a plethora of major journals
including Journal of the American Medical
Association. - These articles date as far back as 1990 and as
recently as last month. - They show that the medical profession is
seriously considering the elements of effective
care and the role that culturally competent
healthcare providers play in it.
24Some of the Progressive Conclusions
- America is much more diverse today than 20 years
ago. - It will only become more diverse.
- This diversity means increased diversity in the
healthcare practice - The diversity is not limited to one region of the
country. - Sensitivity to diverse populations is not enough
- Practitioners need to be proactive in their
understanding of culture and have the ability to
use a patients beliefs in the care protocol. - Ex. May mean that hospital gowns need to be
redesigned to reflect differing understandings of
modesty. - One size fits all does not really fit all.
- Effective healthcare treats the individual as an
individual and recognizes that culture plays a
role in the patients healing. - Race, ethnicity, and language have a substantial
impact on doctor-patient relationships.
25Some of the Progressive Conclusions
- New ways of working with and relating to the
patient are needed. - Providers need to be open to alternative
medicines and holistic approaches to healthcare. - Understanding the culture of the patient is
important in providing quality service. - Healthcare workers will need to be specially
trained to work with diverse populations. - This means they must be culturally competent
- The training will not be a one-shot-wonder but an
on-going effort. - The objective is providing effective care for the
patient - Caregivers that are not culturally competent may
impede the healing process. - The results of culturally incompetent care can be
serious for the patient. - Leaders in healthcare must take a proactive
approach in helping their employees to become
culturally competent
26These conclusions beg the question, if they are
true for the medical profession, one that is
client/patient centered, are they not also true
for the educational profession that promotes its
child-centeredness?
Answer
27Medical Definitions of Cultural Competence
- A willingness to recognize and accept that there
are other legitimate ways of doing things, as
well as a willingness to meet the needs of those
who are different, including those with
disabilities. (Cartledge, 2002) - Campinha-Bacote has defined cultural competence
as the process in which the health care provider
continuously strives to achieve the ability to
effectively work within the cultural context of a
client, individual, family or community. This
process requires nurses to see themselves as
becoming culturally competent rather than being
culturally competent. (Doutrich, 2004) - Barrera Kramer define cultural competence as
the ability of service providers to respond
optimally to all children, understanding both the
richness and the limitations of the
socio-cultural contexts in which the children and
families as well as the service providers
themselves may be operating. (Le Roux, 2002)
28Core Aspects of Cultural Competence
- Proactive-Dont Wait, Take Charge!
- So knowledgeable of other cultures that the
teacher, is so comfortable that they can create a
learning environment that is culturally friendly
and conducive to individual learning for all
students. - It is much more than a simplistic awareness or
sensitivity of diversity. - Before one can understand other cultures the
individual must understand his or her own culture
and how it influences their behavior. - A willingness to be culturally competent.
- No one can be forced to be or become anything.
The desire begins with the individual. - Cultural competence is more than understanding
race or gender. - It involves knowledge and action in relation to
beliefs, values, rituals, and language. - Cultural competence extends beyond the patient or
the student but includes the family and the
larger cultural group.
29A Working Definition
- Knowledgeable of the specific elements of other
cultures as well as their own. - Sensitive to the needs of students from other
cultures. - Able to incorporate the values, beliefs,
traditions, customs, rituals, religion, and
language of diverse cultures into the teaching
and learning process. - Aware of the perceptions of distinct culture
groups towards education and public schooling. - Able to communicate with parents and students
from other cultures. - Willing to use alternative methods that make
material culturally relevant to the students. - Understands that because students come from
different cultures, they do not see the world
through the same lens. - Therefore, what is appropriate to one culture may
not be appropriate to another.
30Is There a Relationship Between Effective
Teaching Cultural Competence?
- Dr. Richard Carmona, U.S. Surgeon General,
supports this belief when he stated, We have to
really appreciate the culture these patients come
from and embrace it, because we cannot be
effective in our jobs as health professionals
without understanding how patients understand
their health and illness. (Odom-Forren, 2005, p.
79)
31Why Become Culturally Competent?
- Our classrooms are becoming and will continue to
become more diverse. - Having the ability to work with multiple cultures
and racial groups strengthens the effectiveness
of a highly qualified teacher. - A greater degree of participation by the student
in the learning process. - Using terms and techniques that are culturally
responsive may encourage students to participate
in the learning process to a greater degree. - This action tells the student that their beliefs
are important and relevant to the learning
process. - A reduction in the failure rate.
- How many students fail each year because they are
not being taught by someone who understands how
culture impacts the learning environment? - Cultural competence may help to change students
and their familys attitudes toward education. - For some, western education has not been a
positive experience.
32How do we create a culturally competent learning
community?
1
Children are affirmed in their cultural
connections
7
Interactions stress collectivity as well
as individuality
Teachers are personally inviting
2
Principles for Building a Learning Community
6
Classroom is managed With firm,
consistent loving control
Classroom is physically inviting
3
Relationships Precede Learning
5
Changes made to accommodate culture
are essential to learning
4
Students are reinforced for academic development
Source Creating Culturally Responsive Classrooms
33Any Questions?