Title: Culture and Its Impact Kennesaw State University ECE 7513
1Culture and Its ImpactKennesaw State
UniversityECE 7513
- By Carol Rackstein and Laura Hesson
2Many People Many Ways of Life
- This third grade class at Esther Jackson
Elementary School is filled with - children from many different cultures. It is an
interesting place to learn.
3What is Culture?
4Culture
Traditionally we thing that culture is made up of
the ideas, skills, arts, music, literature,
tools, and way of life of certain people at a
certain time.
5Culture
-
- Culture is about survival. All cultures have a
model of - survival. We have to guarantee the survival of
the next generation - and teach them to survive.
- Survival Model
- Elements of Survival
Enculturation is the degree to which you
have been successfully instilling survival model.
Socialization is the transmission of survival to
the next generation.
6Socialization
- We are the socialization agents. We must transmit
knowledge for the survival of the next
generation. - Just because groups want to survive doesnt mean
they will. There is no guarantee. - The survival of our current culture is dependent
on our socialization of all todays children no
matter what race, ethnicity, gender, or social
economic status. - We are all dependent on each other. We are all
Americans. The survival of the American culture
is in our hands.
7What is the culture of EJ?
8The Culture of EJS
- Socio-economic status 48.3 of our students are
on free and reduced lunch. - ESOL 23 of our population. Many other
students have graduated out of our ESOL program
but still require extra assistance. - Parent involvement Many of our parents are not
able to provide the necessary help at home due to
the language barrier. While other parents are
extremely involved in the classroom by tutoring
other children, reading to the class, grading and
running our enrichment/extra practice Math Super
Star program, and helping set up classroom
libraries through the PTA.
9Culture of EJ
- Transient population Many of our students
frequently move in and out of our school due to
switching apartments. We also have a certain
percentage, that leave because they return to
Mexico. - Participation in after school events Many
students participate in Book Club, Girl Scouts,
Ballet, and Young Artists. We have an
overwhelming participation when it comes to our
Back to School Bash, Fall Festival, Multicultural
Night, Bingo Night, Chick-fil-a Night, and the
Talent Show. - PTA Our PTA members plan the above functions
for our school, pay for the transportation for
one field trip, and offer us grants.
10The Achievement Gap
- What affects the achievement gap?
- Paul E. Barton did a recent study on factors
that affect student achievement. He found
fourteen points that impact academic success. In
this study Barton (2004, p. 10) found that birth
weight, lead poisoning, hunger and nutrition,
reading to young children, television watching,
parent availability, student mobility, parent
participation, rigor of curriculum, teacher
experience and attendance, teacher preparation,
class size, technology-assisted instruction, and
school safety.
11What role does EJs culture play in the
achievement gap?
- We have a high population of free and reduced
lunch. - High percentage of latch key kids.
- High ESOL population- parents cant help kids at
home. - Our students are transient.
12Ethnic Diversity of EJ
13Gap at EJ
- We are a Title 1 Distinguished School. We have
documentation of continued achievement for all
students. However, that achievement isnt
reflected in the published test scores. - We agree with Popham (2004, p. 48) when he said,
If we referred to the gaps as test score gaps
rather than achievement gaps, people might become
more aware of the inappropriateness of using test
scores as the sole benchmark for student
achievement.
14How do we make learning meaningful for all
students?
- In order for teachers to make instruction
meaningful, they need to use . . .instructional
examples that reflect and connect to the cultures
and experiences of ethnically diverse students.
(Gay, 1992, p. 34) - Not all examples are suited for every ethnic and
cultural group. A teacher needs to be able to
find and implement varied examples that meet a
variety of ethnic and cultural groups in their
daily lessons.
15Making Learning More Meaningful
Geneva Gay gives many examples for making
learning more meaningful. (Gay, 1998)
- Teachers must become more decisive about how best
to work with the ethnic and cultural diversity of
their classroom instead of relying on others to
provide them with answers. - As a teacher you need to know the content,
conventions, and experiences of the cultures of
students that make up your classroom. Then
incorporate that into the daily routine. - At the beginning of the year we need to create
appropriate classroom climates to promote
learning for all students. - We need to have high expectations for all
students. Dont reserve higher level thinking
questions for students who speak the native
language. - Teachers should talk less and allow students to
lead discussions.
16Suggestions for achieving a multicultural
learning environment.
Geneva Gay lists many ideas to achieve a
multicultural environment including some of these
ideas. (2004)
- Peer tutors
- Cooperative groups
- Pairing students
- Centers
- Incorporating technology
- Hands on learning
- Allowing for more student movement
- Establish a trusting relationship between
teachers and students. Create a safe environment.
- Employ a democratic classroom
- Incorporate many cultures in books, music, art,
posters, and other instructional materials.
17Piecing It Together
18 Now what?
- Multicultural Education provides a lot of
problems and theories, but it doesnt provide
clear cut solutions. - There is no one best solution.
- Susan R. Warren says, It is time that
educational reform prompt educators to transform
beliefs, practices, and policies in ways that
nurture, challenge intellectually, and promote
the interests of all students. (2002, p. 114) - Wayne E. Wright encourages schools to adopt
high-quality language programs hat ensure that
English language learners become the
well-educated bilingual citizens that the United
States so desperately need. And lets remove the
burden of preparing English language learners for
state tests from teachers so they can focus
instead on their students linguistic, cultural,
and academic needs. (2006, pg 26)
19The Most Important Question!
What can we do about it?
20Bibliographic Information
- Barton, P. E. (2004). Why does the gap persist?
Educational Leadership, 62(3), 8-13. - Diaz, C. F. (1992). Multicultural education for
the 21st century. In G. Gay (Eds.), Effective
Multicultural Teaching Practices (pp. 23-39).
Washington, D.C.NEA Professional Library,
National Education Association. - Popham, W. J. (2004). A game without winners.
Educational Leadership, 62(3), 46-50. - Smith, C. R. (2003). I am america. Singapore
Scholastic Incorporated. - Warren, S. R. (2002). Stories from the
classrooms How expectations and efficacy of
diverse teachers affect the academic performance
of children in poor urban schools. Educational
Horizons, 80(3),109-116. - Wright, W. E. (2006). A catch-22 for language
learners. Educational Leadership, 64(3), 22-27.