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Multiculturalism and Student Learning

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Title: Multiculturalism and Student Learning


1
Multiculturalism and Student Learning
  • Implications for Teaching and Assessment

Victor M. H. Borden, Ph.D. Associate Vice
President University Planning, Institutional
Research, and Accountability (IU) Associate
Professor of Psychology (IUPUI) vborden_at_indiana.ed
u
2
In Conclusion
  • Multiculturalism is a multi-layered construct
  • Choose some common threads
  • Enable individual faculty and staff to experiment
    and innovate
  • Collaborative inquiry is the key to understanding
    and constructive change
  • assessing together to plan, implement, evaluate,
    and improve
  • To incorporate multiculturalism into your
    teaching requires you to hold yourself to the
    same learning expectations that you hold your
    students
  • But first

3
Who am I?
  • Social psychological in perspective
  • Neo-Lewinian with Argyristic tendencies and a
    perverse fascination with situated learning
  • A lifelong administrator with an added faculty
    line
  • Areas of specialty
  • Multiculturalism not really
  • Diversity more so
  • Organizational transformation through
    evidence-based practice Id like to think so
  • IR at the core
  • Frontperson for the AIR Windbreakers

4
Where am I?
  • Not Kansas, apparently
  • Purdue Calumet
  • Carnegie 2000 - Masters Colleges Universities
    I
  • Carnegie 2005
  • Undergraduate Instructional Program 
  • Professions plus arts sciences, some graduate
    coexistence 
  • Graduate Instructional Program
  • Postbaccalaureate with arts sciences (business
    dominant) 
  • Enrollment Profile
  • Very high undergraduate
  • Undergraduate Profile
  • Medium full-time four-year, inclusive
  • Size and Setting
  • Medium four-year, primarily nonresidential 
  • Basic Master's Colleges and Universities (medium
    programs)

5
IPEDS Data Feedback Report
  • Central Missouri State University (Warrensburg,
    MO)
  • Chicago State University (Chicago, IL)
  • Eastern Illinois University (Charleston, IL)
  • Emporia State University (Emporia, KS)
  • Fort Hays State University (Hays, KS)
  • Georgia Southwestern State University (Americus,
    GA)
  • Governors State University (University Park, IL)
  • Indiana University-Northwest (Gary, IN)
  • Indiana University-Purdue University-Fort Wayne
    (Fort Wayne, IN)
  • Indiana University-South Bend (South Bend, IN)
  • Indiana University-Southeast (New Albany, IN)
  • Kean University (Union, NJ)
  • Kennesaw State University (Kennesaw, GA)
  • Minnesota State University-Mankato (Mankato, MN)
  • Minnesota State University-Moorhead (Moorhead,
    MN)
  • Northeastern Illinois University (Chicago, IL)
  • Northern Michigan University (Marquette, MI)
  • Northwest Missouri State University (Maryville,
    MO)
  • Pittsburg State University (Pittsburg, KS)
  • Southeast Missouri State University (Cape
    Girardeau, MO)
  • Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
    (Edwardsville, IL)
  • The University of Tennessee-Chattanooga
    (Chattanooga, TN)
  • University of Central Oklahoma (Edmond, OK)
  • University of Massachusetts-Boston (Boston, MA)
  • University of Michigan-Dearborn (Dearborn, MI)
  • University of Minnesota-Duluth (Duluth, MN)
  • University of Nebraska at Omaha (Omaha, NE)
  • University of North Carolina at Greensboro
    (Greensboro, NC)
  • University of North Carolina-Wilmington
    (Wilmington, NC)
  • University of Northern Iowa (Cedar Falls, IA)
  • University of Southern Indiana (Evansville, IN)
  • University of Wisconsin-La Crosse (La Crosse, WI)
  • University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point (Stevens
    Point, WI)
  • Valdosta State University (Valdosta, GA)
  • William Paterson University of New Jersey (Wayne,
    NJ)
  • Winona State University (Winona, MN)

6
Purdue Cal Indiana Context
  • In comparison to
  • Purdue North Central
  • IPFW
  • IU Northwest
  • IU South Bend
  • IU Southeast
  • IU Kokomo
  • IU East

7
Student Body Profile 1
8
Student Body Profile 2
9
Student Body Profile 3
10
6-Year Graduation Rate
11
Faculty Profile 1
12
Faculty Profile 2
13
Racial/Ethnic Faculty to Student Ratios
14
Back on Task
  • What is multiculturalism in relation to student
    learning?
  • What can you do at Purdue Calumet to improve
    teaching and learning for our diverse,
    multicultural student body?
  • Why and how is assessment (and collaborative
    inquiry in particular) an important part of the
    effort?

15
Perspectives on Multiculturalism
  • Knefelkamp
  • Attending to the variety of learning styles
  • Banks five overlapping dimensions
  • Content integration Knowledge construction
    Equity pedagogy Prejudice reduction Empowering
    classroom culture
  • Kolbs four step approach to MC pedagogy
  • Concrete experience Reflective observation
    Abstract conceptualization Active experimentation

16
Perspectives on Multiculturalism
  • Grant Sleeter Context Specific
  • Perspectives of under-represented peoples
  • Instructional strategies for multiple learning
    styles
  • Promotion of social justice
  • Removing bias from questions and cases
  • Appealing to varied interests
  • Bennet Teachers as
  • Student advocates inquiry-based practitioners
    agents of social change competent with content
  • Gay Culturally responsive pedagogy
  • Kitano Developing democratic citizens

17
Recommended Resources 1
  • AACU Diversity Web - http//www.diversityweb.org/

18
Recommended Resources 2
http//www.opd.iupui.edu/diversity/resource_guide.
htm
19
(No Transcript)
20
Other Resources
  • Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (U
    of M) Section on Multicultural teaching
  • http//www.crlt.umich.edu/multiteaching/multiteach
    ing.html
  • EdChanges Multicultural Pavilion
  • Multicultural Teaching Toolbox,
    http//www.edchange.org/multicultural/teachers.htm
    l
  • Banks et al., (2001). Diversity within unity
    Essential Principles for Teaching And Learning in
    a Multicultural Society (http//www.educ.washingto
    n.edu/coetestwebsite/pdf/DiversityUnity.pdf)
  • Schoem, D., Frankel, L., Zuniga, X., Lewis, E.
    (1993). Multicultural teaching in the
    university. Westport, CT Praeger
  • National Association for Multicultural Education
    (NAME)
  • http//www.nameorg.org/

21
So What Do We Do?
  • If multiculturalism can be so many different
    things to different people at different times,
    how do we proceed?
  • By developing some core objectives
  • With as much or more individual experimentation,
    innovation, and creativity
  • By bringing more people on board

22
Developing Core Objectives
  • Whats the problem?
  • Are racial/ethnic, low SES, or first-generation
    performance gaps related to uni-cultural teaching
    practices?
  • Is there a problem of awareness and/or
    acceptance?
  • Maybe its more an opportunity than a problem
  • Given its environment and mission, can Purdue
    Calumet stake a claim in this territory?

23
Things to Look At
  • Leadership commitment
  • Is this on senior administrators radar screen
    and, if so, how?
  • Are there sufficient rewards, incentives, and
    supports?
  • Curricular requirements
  • Is understanding and working with human
    difference part of the Gen Ed program? Major
    outcomes? How is it taught and assessed?
  • Campus climate
  • See recent IUPUI experience
  • Representational diversity
  • What does the gap between student and faculty
    representation portend?
  • How are different students represented across
    majors (gender race/ethnicity age, etc.)

24
For Example
Bachelor's Degrees Conferred at Purdue Calumet,
2004-05
Percent
Black
and
Hispanic
Total Number
Business
199
9
13
72
15
15
Social Sciences and History
6
10
Engineering-Related Technologies
69
11
8
Computer and Information Sciences
66
4
14
Education
57
13
18
Health Professions/Life Sciences
56
21
6
Communications
53
15
9
Psychology
47
5
27
Humanities and Fine Arts
41
15
10
Engineering
40
6
6
17
Physics/Math
6
50
16
Home Ec/Park Rec
25
And What About
  • DFW rates in popular introductory courses among
    various groups?
  • Student responses, overall and by group, to key
    NSSE items
  • Included diverse perspectives (different races,
    religions, genders, political beliefs, etc.) in
    class discussions or writing assignments
  • Had serious conversations with students
  • A) of a different race/ethnicity
  • B) who are very different in terms of religious
    beliefs, political opinions, or personal values
  • Understanding people of other racial and ethnic
    backgrounds
  • Compared to faculty responses (FSSE)?

26
How Else Can You Find Out Whether
  • Students feel welcome in class?
  • Teaching methods accommodate different learning
    styles?
  • There are any unintended use of language
    barriers?
  • There are any biases in examples used?

27
Multicultural Assessment
  • There are many ways to do assessment
  • It is about looking for evidence to determine
    what is happening, relative to what you think
    should be happening
  • Evidence takes many forms
  • Documented (what others have observed and
    written)
  • Direct observation quantitative and
    experiential (practitioner and client/user)
  • Contextual

28
Assessment All Along the Way
29
The Outcomes Assessment Matrix
30
Learn About It, and Then
  • Identify some core issues to approach as a
    community
  • Identify interesting practice
  • Visit if possible
  • Brainstorm to adopt and determine how you will
    assess
  • Try it, check it, learn from it
  • Tweak and check or try something else
  • But give things time to see if they can be done
    better

31
Enabling Individual Development and Exploration
  • What kind of supports are in place and what
    incentives promote there use?
  • Important to enable individuals to innovate,
    experiment, check, learn, and disseminate
  • Scholarship of teaching, learning, and supporting
  • Communities of practice is a useful concept for
    enabling individuals to work together toward
    individual and collective gain

32
Communities of Practice
  • Learning as a social system (Etienne Wenger)
  • Members of a community, bound by what they do
    together and by what they have learned through
    their mutual engagement in these activities
  • Based on distinctions between
  • Learning about and learning to be (Bruner)
  • Knowing that and knowing how (Ryle)

33
CofP is not
  • a business or functional unit in that it defines
    itself in the doing, as members develop among
    themselves their own understanding of what their
    practice is about
  • a team in that the shared learning and interest
    of its members are what keep it together
  • a network in the sense that it is "about"
    something it is not just a set of relationships

34
Learning to Teach Better
  • We expect our students to
  • Learn how to think differently (deconstruct/recons
    truct)
  • Learn how to be effective students
  • What can they expect from us?
  • Adopt our teaching strategies to changing
    realities
  • Accommodate diversity

35
Parting Suggestion
  • Create a community of practice around
    multicultural teaching and learning
  • Assess the situation
  • Look at available data
  • Visit each others classes, looking for
    multiculturalism opportunities
  • Talk to students outside class
  • Come up with some ideas for interventions
  • Try them test them
  • Write it up for presentation, publication, and,
    most importantly improvement

36
How is This Different?
  • Typical Centers for Teaching and Learning focus
    on individual faculty development/improvement
  • CofP approach represents mutual engagement
  • Inherently multi-disciplinary and multicultural
  • Can promote buy-in among broader base

37
Local or Global
  • Might Purdue Calumet adopt multicultural teaching
    and learning as a strategic initiative?
  • Would it be better to let this grow from the
    ground up or is it better to have top-down
    direction?
  • Is there a hybrid approach that fosters local
    organization with leadership support and
    incentive?

38
Closing Quotes from Ted Marchese
  • Good teachers, like "reflective practitioners" in
    other professions, constantly test, adjust, and
    reframe their models of practice on the basis of
    experience and reflection.
  • Assessment is a process in which rich, usable,
    credible feedback from an act -- of teaching or
    curriculum -- comes to be reflected upon by an
    academic community, and then is acted on by that
    community -- a department or college -- within
    its commitment to get smarter and better at what
    it does.
  • http//www.newhorizons.org/lifelong/higher_ed/marc
    hese.htm
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